The Hard Life of Small Business Owners in Brazil Amid Double-Digit Inflation

Leaving the supermarket with enough to feed her family has become an increasingly tough challenge for Brazilian small business owner Andreia Dias Alvares, 42, as food prices shoot upwards.

Earning less than 1,000 reais ($185) per month, below the national minimum wage, Alvares said her only option was to make cuts to household spending, including reducing meal sizes for herself and her two teenagers.

“Prices have practically doubled. For my family, meat no longer enters the house and I started shopping in stores that sell expired products,” said Alvares, a single mother from São Paulo.

Brazil has been grappling with double-digit annual inflation since September, with consumer prices up by 12% in a year, according to the statistics agency IBGE.

Countries around the world have been facing rising food and fuel costs, largely driven by the impact of the Ukraine war.

In Brazil, lower rainfall has also reduced crop yields and hydropower generation, adding to upward price pressure, said Andre Braz, an economist at Fundação Getúlio Vargas (FGV), a socioeconomic research and education institute.

In São Paulo, prices for staple goods such as wheat flour, beans, rice, cooking oil and milk have risen by more than 20% in a year, according to the Inter-Union Department of Statistics and Socio-Economic Studies (DIEESE), a union-founded research organization.

Meanwhile, average earnings nationwide have dropped 7.2% since 2021, said IBGE, indicating the labor market recovery from COVID-19 has been centered in lower-income occupations.

BUSINESS CHALLENGES

Alvares started a small business making pastries and cakes after she lost her job during the COVID-19 pandemic, but rising costs have eaten into her income.

She has put up her prices by 7% – but her profits are down by 60%.

Despite doing “everything to keep the sales,” including absorbing much of the price rises in ingredients and fuel, she says she has lost many customers as they cut back on non-essential spending.

In Rio de Janeiro, Anna Karolyna Mendes and her family also started a food business during the pandemic, selling packed lunches to low-paid street workers like drivers and delivery staff.

They have had to be flexible to stay profitable.

“Everything became more expensive, (so) we had to reinvent ourselves,” said Mendes.

“When there’s a sale of a specific vegetable, for instance, we buy much more of that product and change the recipes to use the same ingredient.”

A year ago, the family shopped at two markets – now, they shop at five.

“For those who work in the streets … the food we make is cheaper than going to the market on their own,” she said.

While Mendes said she believed they could stay competitive and profitable, Alvares is looking at getting a second part-time job to supplement her income.

“I’m very worried,” she said. “It’s getting more and more complicated to maintain even the basic bills and the situation is snowballing.”

This article was produced by the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Visit them at https://news.trust.org/

Tags:

You May Also Like

Two indigenous custodians of the land in the Brazilian Amazon | Pho Yre

A Message to Brazil: “We Are Not Occupying Your Lands. You Have Invaded Us.”

We will remember 2020 as the year when the coronavirus pandemic spread worldwide, reached ...

Former speaker of the House, Eduardo Cunha - ABr

Brazil’s Former House Speaker and Jailbird Threatens to Blow Up Business World

In jail for fraud, Eduardo Cunha, Brazil’s former lower house speaker and chief architect ...

Brazil Could Become Another Greece, Warns Planning Minister

Brazilian acting minister of Planning, Development, and Management Dyogo Henrique indicated that public spending ...

Supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro clash with security forces. Joedson Alves/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Bolsonaro Is the Main Responsible for the Storming of Congress, Supreme Court and Presidential Office in Brazil

Thousands of far-right supporters of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro stormed the country’s Congress, ...

Jair Bolsonaro, the moment he is hit by a knife

Brazil’s Right-Wing Presidential Frontrunner Survives Assassination Attempt

The dramatic stabbing of firebrand right-wing politician Jair Bolsonaro was caught on video and ...

Venezuelan kids wait for a meal at a migrant shelter in Boa Vista, Roraima state, Brazil - Eraldo Peres/AP

Brazil Teaches the World How to Be Humane to Refugees

The global north tends to view the global south as a source of refugees, ...

Another Lula Man Goes to Jail for Corruption: Former Finance Minister Palocci

Brazil’s Federal Police arrested early this Monday, September 26, in São Paulo, former Finance ...

Supreme Court's building in Brasília

70% of Brazilian Authorities’ Cases in the Higher Court Have to Do with Corruption

Some 70% of cases involving authorities at the Brazilian Supreme Court and the Superior ...

Brazilian Informal Economy Grows 9% and Brazil Doesn’t Know How to Deal with It

Brazil’s informal economy grew 9.1% between 1997 and 2003, according to the Brazilian Institute ...

Eike Batista, Once Brazil’s Wealthiest Man, Is Now an International Fugitive

Brazilian businessman Eike Batista was put on Interpol’s list of wanted people. After the ...