Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Barter Russians

From the MT:
"Russians Turn to Bartering in Economic Recession"
 
An economic recession and soaring grocery prices have prompted Russians to go online to trade household items for food, with scores of websites facilitating a barter system cropping up around the country. Russia's main social network, VKontakte, has an array of online groups, targeting various cities, where local inhabitants place ads to trade clothes, furniture, tableware or even kittens for “yummies.” The idea has gained traction in the Siberian city of Omsk, where one group had garnered more that 58,000 followers by Wednesday. The relatively prosperous Moscow also has a few, although the Moscow groups lag far behind in popularity, despite the capital's much larger population. Some of the ads are phrased in general terms, describing the item that is being offered and inviting possible trades. Others are highly specific, offering a hair straightener in exchange for a chicken, a handbag for a kilogram of sugar, or a clothing iron for three cans of sardines. The Siberian branch of the state-run Rossia television network described the barter system in Omsk as residents' “way of surviving the crisis.” “At a time of an economic decline, various sanctions and growing food prices, the people of Omsk don't abandon each other in trouble, but use such guileless methods to share extra goods they have accumulated,” the network's reporter said in a Tuesday newscast. Russia has few thrift shops or charities where local inhabitants can donate clothes or furniture, and some social network users praised the online groups as a way to “freecycle” unneeded possessions. A young woman from Omsk, Natalya Rovenskaya, who recently traded two cans of green peas for a coffee set, told Sibera's Rossia television she often exchanged books and tableware, while children's clothes were also popular items to trade among social network users. “Some people used to throw away what was no longer needed, but now there is an opportunity to trade,” she said. “I trade a lot, and I give away very many things, and thanks to this I have made a lot of friends.” Russia banned food imports from the West in response to sanctions against Moscow, and Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered government agents to destroy any food smuggled into the country. Russia will introduce additional screening of food imports on the border with Belarus starting on Dec. 7, to prevent banned produce and groceries from being smuggled through the neighboring country under fake papers, the head of agriculture watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor, Sergei Dankvert, said Tuesday, the Interfax news agency reported. Russia's economy is in a deep recession, having shrunk in recent years by about 40 percent in U.S. dollar terms, due in part to a drop in the price of oil and to Western sanctions imposed for Moscow's annexation of Crimea and support for separatist insurgents in eastern Ukraine. The ban on food imports has contributed to further price hikes in Russian grocery stores. Moscow recently added Turkey to the list of countries from which food imports are prohibited, after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane near the Turkish-Syrian border on Nov. 24.
 
 
^  This isn't really anything new for the Russians. They have always had to struggle  to survive because of their government (ie the Czars, the Communists, etc) and wars. Russia is a cash society because of all the difficulties the people have had to endure throughout their lifetime. There's a Russian joke I once heard that says a Russian up to 30 years old looks their age (young and fit) but at 31 they start looking like they are 60 because that's when the real Russian hardships hit them. Before 31 they are helped by their parents and then at 31 they are on their own and their face takes the toll. It seems to be true. Life could be easier for the ordinary Russian if their government took the time to help them and if they got out of the Crimea and stopped helping the ethnic Russian terrorists in eastern Ukraine and if Russia would fully commit to becoming a part of the international world rather than always being so paranoid and causing trouble. I know many Russians who left Russia not because they didn't love their country, but because life was always too hard. That is sad to hear. ^
 

http://www.themoscowtimes.com/business/article/russians-turn-to-bartering-in-economic-recession/551457.html
 

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