Join hands to rescue each other's struggling businesses. No? Here is an example
Business
Some bars and restaurants Caracas are offering an eight-hour tour
LAHORE/CARACAS (Web Desk) – Innovation is a skill that enables humans to face any challenge and survive through a disaster. The current economic crisis has been testing not only our nerves but also ability to manage the accounts. Story is the same across Pakistan and around the globe.
With a record-high inflation, businesses are finding it hard to stay open because of fewer customers – an obvious product of declining domestic demand or domestic consumption given that Pakistan can’t attract foreign tourists. Everyone is feeling the heat except those catering to the needs of elite and upper middle class.
Downsizing and pay cuts or freeze are the tools employed by businesses, which directly affect the people whose purchasing power is shrinking at an unprecedented rate with very few new job opportunities.
On the other hand, measures like discount offers are advertised to attract the customers amid an intense competition. Others, who focus on middle class or low-income groups, have decided to compromise on their quality, be it clothes or eateries.
What about joining your hands to rescue each other’s livelihood? Never heard about it Pakistan. But we have an example from Venezuela – an oil-rich country but a victim of geopolitics where inflation has been skyrocketing years before the pandemic and the Ukraine war, mainly due to the US sanctions.
According to Reuters, several bars and restaurants in Venezuela's capital Caracas are offering an eight-hour tour where customers visit each establishment in a bid to boost low sales at a time of persistent inflation.
The so-called "Route of Pagan Temples" takes diners through two restaurants and seven bars in the city in a tour which has been organized by the businesses involved.
"It's about rescuing the bars (...) giving these spaces a showcase so that they can survive," said Freddy de Freitas, owner of a Spanish food restaurant in Caracas' center which is more than 40 years old.
"The business activity of bars in this part of the city isn't what it was due to the situation of the economy," he added.
The government of President Nicolas Maduro relaxed control of the economy in 2019, allowing de facto dollarization which provided breathing space for businesses, though not a complete recovery.
This year, businesses have seen lower sales due to delays in wage payments and year-on-year inflation of 282 per cent.
The nine-venue tour starts in de Freitas' Spanish restaurant, where visitors can chow down on tapas including croquettes and potato tortilla among others, before continuing on to the other establishments in private transport.
The tour – which costs $80 per person – winds up in a bustling part of Caracas filled with street musicians.
"The route seeks to reconnect people with these places, to know their history, so that there's no gap between the east and west of the city, that there is only one Caracas," said Maxwell Briceno, a photographer and tour organizer.
One recent tour saw a number of foreign visitors join in the fun, according to Reuters witnesses.
"I have the opportunity to see this spectacle. It's wild," said German tourist Rafael Braumann. "The beer tastes good and there's music," he added.