Sorry I got off the topic. That is there. Here in Mozambique people are rich with time but need more money just for the basics.
Dust off your micro-economic books and remember the simple supply and demand theory; the price of the good is balanced with how many items there are and how many people want to buy it. Now, I live in an agricultural area and homes have enough land to grow produce to sell it at the market – supply is high; costs are relatively low.
COMMMON FOOD ITEMS | US $ |
3 mangos | $ 0.25 |
1/2 dz rolls | $ 0.75 |
1/2 dozen eggs | $ 1.00 |
can of tuna | $ 1.00 |
box of spaghetti | $ 0.50 |
1 lb plum tomatoes | $ 0.25 |
1 lb onions | $ 0.25 |
bunch of green herbs | $ 0.25 |
2 red apples imported | $ 1.00 |
1 avocado | $ 0.10 |
4 romaine lettuce heads | $ 0.25 |
1 lb of brown sugar | $ 0.85 |
1 lb of sweet potatoes | $ 0.50 |
· Employee of the Federal Health Care System
· Equivalent to having an associate’s degree in nursing (LPN)
· His income is $1,990 per year – 3x more than the gross national statistics ($660)
· His weekly income is approx. $45
DIET OF ONE DAY EST. | |
3 fruits | $ 0.25 |
bread roll | $ 0.05 |
3 eggs | $ 0.25 |
Chicken & rice dinner | $ 2.00 |
day total | $ 2.55 |
av. week | $ 17.85 |
wks income | $ 45.00 |
% of income just on food | 40% |
It is difficult for me to fathom how the unemployed / under-educated families survive. I see the results of low-literacy and malnutrition every day. Intuition tells me with continued training, influence, and foreign investments this generation of children will yield the results that we are all striving for.
Let's hope I'm right. http://bloggingabroad.org/blog-challenge