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How Egyptians face a food crisis: With creativity … and half a loaf

Grocery shops and butchers in Cairo hang handwritten signs in their windows with a request: “Please do not ask about discounts.” It speaks to the dire straits Egyptians find themselves in this winter as they try to meet the nutritional needs of their families.

Facing soaring food costs and one of the world’s highest inflation rates due to Ukraine war-induced shortages and a devalued currency, Egyptians are trying to make up what they lack in purchasing power with ingenuity and sacrifice as prices go up – even by the hour. Solutions range from homegrown chickens and shrinking loaves of bread to leaner, vegetarian feasts – even for company.

Why We Wrote This

How much can a belt be tightened? In Egypt, families are cutting back, shrinking portions, and creatively trying to ensure their families are fed amid Ukraine war food prices and soaring inflation.

“It has completely changed how the market works, how much people buy, how much we order from suppliers, how suppliers prepare. We are all affected,” says Cairo grocer Youssef al-Sharqawi. “Instead of buying a kilo of apples, people buy a single apple, a lone potato instead of a bag.”

Mohammed, a baker facing skyrocketing flour costs, says customers complain about the shrinking loaves even as prices remain constant, but asks, “What can we do?” He and his daughter have had to impose their own austerity, he says, eating far less chicken or other meat. “We all have to make do.”

Cutting corners, shrinking portions, inventing substitutes – Egyptian families are pushing the limits of their creativity to meet the nutritional needs of their families amid unprecedented price rises this winter.

Facing soaring food costs and one of the world’s highest inflation rates due to Ukraine war-induced shortages and a devalued currency, Egyptians are trying to make up what they lack in purchasing power with ingenuity and sacrifice as prices go up – even by the hour.

Solutions range from homegrown chickens and shrinking loaves of bread to leaner, vegetarian feasts – even when hosting company.

Why We Wrote This

How much can a belt be tightened? In Egypt, families are cutting back, shrinking portions, and creatively trying to ensure their families are fed amid Ukraine war food prices and soaring inflation.

“Many people in Cairo live day by day,” Ahmed, a carpenter who, like others interviewed, gave only his first name. “With inflation and price rises, that means each day we are bringing home less and less food.”

One of the most visible global economic impacts of Russia’s war in Ukraine can be found here in Egypt. More specifically, it can be found in Egyptian bread, aysh, the lifeblood of Egyptian families.

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