The income of ordinary people is between 20,000- 30,000 kyat per month and one gauge of the dire economic situation in Burma is the fact that the official exchange rate is 6 kyat to the U.S. greenback, while the unofficial rate is more like 1,350, whereas a package of 24 kilo rice cost more that 20,000 kyat, so practically it is difficult for the ordinary people to survive.
Ko Ko Gi, a student leader who was arrested recently, said that dissatisfaction over the present economic hardship is trivial in comparison to the smoldering political crisis, because, the military authoritarianism has been the root cause of bloody political unrests and widespread ethnic rebellion in
The kyat has a story all it’s own: on an astrologer’s advice, former Burmese strongman U Ne Win decided the currency should be denominated in multiples of nine, because 9 was a much more auspicious number than 10. As a result 45- and 90-kyat notes still circulate in
Before the 1962 coup that installed a military regime in power,
Combine that hunger with today’s high prices, and you can easily see how the need to import diesel could help prompt a price rise. This wasn’t the first time the regime imposed such a hike, either; two years ago fuel prices shot up nine fold. You don’t have to be a rocket scientist, actually Burma’s junta supremo Than Shwe is a former postal clerk, to know people might be mad about the abrupt Aug. 15 doubling of diesel prices and fivefold increase in the cost of compressed natural gas, a hike passed on to passengers using public transport. Or, indeed, that it’s bad PR to throw a lavish wedding ceremony for your daughter, as Than Shwe did, showing how the gem-encrusted elite parties on, while one in three Burmese children is malnourished, according to the World Food Program.
Burma is an isolating country by itself, not much pressure can be put. Unless chase him out from United Nation, but can't we? Can't the two big veto countries agree with the motion?
ReplyDeleteShort sighted ruling military. How dare you rise 5 fold fuel prices?
ReplyDeletePeople can't bare the high price.