Baguettes fall victim to Tunisia’s economic woes

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An employee works at a bakery selling baguettes in Tunis on August 7, 2023. (AFP)
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  • Last week the ministry of commerce banned some 1,500 privately-owned bakeries that produced European-style breads and pastries from purchasing subsidized flour.
  • Economists say that this "bread crisis" stems from an inadequate reserve of subsidized flour held by the Tunisian government.

Tunis, Tunisia — Around 200 Tunisian bakers staged a sit-in Monday after a government decision to stop selling them subsidized flour, a move threatening the closure of hundreds of bakeries.

“We are being forbidden from producing baguettes,” Mohamed Jamali, president of the Association of Modern Bakeries, told AFP in Tunis where the protest took place.

Last week the ministry of commerce banned some 1,500 privately-owned bakeries that produced European-style breads and pastries from purchasing subsidized flour, ending a practice that had lasted for more than a decade.

It came after President Kais Saied proclaimed in late July that there should be “one type of bread for all Tunisians” in an official video address.

According to Jamali, the European-style bakeries which employ around 18,000 people have been “unable to operate for a week” since August 1.

Demonstrators who rallied around him held up signs that read: “bread, freedom, national dignity,” and “thousands of employees will be laid off”.

“The people you see here today have not been able to carry out their regular activity, which is the production of bread,” Jamali said.

Abdelbeki Abdellawi, 43, warned that some bakers might end up “facing imprisonment” because they can’t afford to pay their rent or loans.

Tunisia’s “modern bakeries” sell baguettes and other kinds of breads and pastries in which they use part of the subsidised flour.

“Why is there subsidized bread and unsubsidized bread? The purpose is to hit Tunisians in their purchasing power and threaten social peace,” Saied had said on July 27.

The president criticised the “modern bakeries” for using subsidised flour to produce other types of bread sold at slightly higher prices.

“It is over today for those who want to sell unsubsidized bread. Measures must be taken to provide bread to all Tunisians,” Saied said.

For several months, some 3,737 bakeries of a distinct network selling only subsidized baguettes at a cost of 190 Tunisian millimes (around $0.07 cents) — a price unchanged since 1984 — have been facing a flour shortage.

This has led to long queues forming outside the shops from dawn.

Economists told AFP that this “bread crisis” stems from an inadequate reserve of subsidized flour held by the Tunisian government, which centralizes all purchases of basic goods.

Experts say the inflation-ravaged and heavily indebted country has been forced to stagger the flour supply to bakeries after suppliers started demanding payments up-front.

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