Ghana bakers feel the heat of rising inflation

Bakers prepare rolls of bread dough at the Bethel Brothers bakery in Accra, Ghana, March 6, 2022. — Reuters pic

Follow us on Instagram and subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

ACCRA, March 11 — Blazing heat radiated from the wood-fired oven of the Bethel Brothers Bakery in Ghana's capital Accra, as a dozen men hastily shaped dough into hundreds of rolls that would be scattered through the city the following morning.

The bakery, founded nearly 25 years ago by childhood friends Raphael Borketey and David Eshun, churns out hundreds of loaves of bread each day for households, restaurants and street traders. But spiralling inflation could soon shut its doors.

"Every month they increase the price of flour... sugar, margarine, all things that we need to produce bread," Borketey said. "You try to stand, then a new (price increase) will come and knock you down again."

Supply chain bottlenecks caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, a depreciating national currency and other global market factors have sent inflation spiralling over the past nine months to its highest levels since 2016, with the country's consumer price inflation hitting 15.7 per cent in February.

David Eshun 45, co-owner of Bethel Brothers bakery, prepares to deliver baked bread from the Bethel Brothers bakery to customers in Accra, Ghana, March 8, 2022. — Reuters pic

Cereals have seen some of the steepest price rises — and that was before the Russian invasion of Ukraine last month further stretched global commodity markets, particularly wheat. Ghana imports nearly a quarter of its wheat from Russia, according to data from the Observatory of Economic Complexity.

The inflation has been disastrous for bakeries, whose sales prices are standardised by the national bakers' association and have not risen since August.

Many have had to reduce portion size or illegally hike prices to stay afloat. Bethel Brothers is laden with debt and has been forced to lay off staff.

"We have sacrificed a lot (and) this (inflation) could bring it all to an end," Borketey said. "A bad month or year can put you out of business. It's very painful."

Eshun still sets off before dawn each morning to deliver fresh bread to faithful customers from a rackety delivery van held together with pins and wire.

But these days he can barely afford fuel and has been running out between stops.

The 45-year-old's doctor says he is in dire need of sleep, another luxury Eshun said he cannot afford.

"I am a born and bred Ghanaian. I have never travelled anywhere before. This is my country," Eshun said. "If I cannot make it in my own country, then where am I going to make it?" — Reuters

Baked bread from Bethel Brothers Bakery is seen on a street vendor's stall in Accra, Ghana, March 8, 2022. — Reuters pic

Source: Malay Mail https://ift.tt/dU6rg7J

A word from our sponsor:

Need Help With Your Personal Finance or need a coach to help you structure or just want to learn the financial skill to self manage your financial matters and retirement. iLearnFromCloud.com

Need to solve a problem quickly, now you can solve it by learning the art of problem solving Art Of Problem Solving

Feeling hungry. Latest food news from Best Restaurant To Eat Malaysian Food and Travel Blog

Memory loss. Need to organize better. Solve problem fast with Free Mind Mapping Software Mind Mapping 101

Need A Customized System Development for your business or Going Paperless XPERT TECHNOLOGIES - Empowering The Paperless Economy
from Best Restaurant To Eat - Malaysian Food Travel Blog https://ift.tt/rFsj6gk

ACCRA, March 11 — Blazing heat radiated from the wood-fired oven of the Bethel Brothers Bakery in Ghana's capital Accra, as a dozen men hastily shaped dough into hundreds of rolls that would be scattered through the city the following morning. The bakery, founded nearly 25 years ago by...

Original Post From Best Restaurant To Eat Facebook page.


This free site is ad-supported. Learn more