Public Project
Hunger Crimes
HUNGER CRIMES
In Venezuela, the collapse of the economy and the subsequent food shortages has lead to a new type of crime: hunger crime.
Out-of-control hyperinflation, measuring 1,000,000% in 2018, has meant prices doubling every week. Even employed people with steady jobs can’t afford to buy the most basic goods. The last Survey of Living Conditions (ENCOVI) reports that 89.4% of respondents said their household income was not enough to buy food and 61% reported sleeping hungry at night. A report this year from Cáritas found that the average family required 98 times the minimum wage to afford adequate food to subsist.
The epidemic of empty stomachs has unleashed a new wave of hunger-motivated crimes. The rise of these crimes has been tracked by NGOs such as the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence. In a country where virtually all crimes go unpunished and money is worth less than the paper it is printed on crime becomes a viable solution to hunger.
Fathers go out at night to steal motorcycles. Gangsters recruit youngsters by paying them in food. Crime and insecurity is on the rise. Robberies and kidnappings have become a major industry. The direct consequences are suffered on the streets: 1.368 people were killed in Caracas in 2018, according to Monitor de Victimas.
Out-of-control hyperinflation, measuring 1,000,000% in 2018, has meant prices doubling every week. Even employed people with steady jobs can’t afford to buy the most basic goods. The last Survey of Living Conditions (ENCOVI) reports that 89.4% of respondents said their household income was not enough to buy food and 61% reported sleeping hungry at night. A report this year from Cáritas found that the average family required 98 times the minimum wage to afford adequate food to subsist.
The epidemic of empty stomachs has unleashed a new wave of hunger-motivated crimes. The rise of these crimes has been tracked by NGOs such as the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence. In a country where virtually all crimes go unpunished and money is worth less than the paper it is printed on crime becomes a viable solution to hunger.
Fathers go out at night to steal motorcycles. Gangsters recruit youngsters by paying them in food. Crime and insecurity is on the rise. Robberies and kidnappings have become a major industry. The direct consequences are suffered on the streets: 1.368 people were killed in Caracas in 2018, according to Monitor de Victimas.
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Caracas, Venezuela
June 2018
© Ignacio Marin
Caracas, Venezuela
June 2018
© Ignacio Marin
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