Kebab, the surge in prices is worrying. And politics intervenes

Kebab, the surge in prices is worrying. And politics intervenes
Kebab, the surge in prices is worrying. And politics intervenes

The soaring cost of Doener kebab worries the Germans and puts Chancellor Olaf Scholz in difficulty. The spit-roasted meat dish – imported to Germany by Turkish immigrants, who adapted it to local tastes, and whose sales amount to around 7 billion euros a year – today it costs up to 10 euros in some cities of the country, compared to 4 euros just two years ago.

Scholz is so used to being asked about the subject during his public appearances that his government has decided to use social media to explain that if prices have risen this is partly due to the increase in other costs, from rent to those of energy. “It’s quite surprising that everywhere I go, especially from young people, I get asked whether there shouldn’t be a cap on the price of Doeners,” Scholz said.

The far left party Die Linke was the last to take an interest in the topic asking, with a proposal that he wants to present to parliament, the introduction of a maximum price ceiling for the popular dish.

The party recommends a maximum price of 4.9 euros and 2.90 euros for young people, in particular those from low-income families, for whom – he claims – the plate of grilled meat, cut into thin slices and seasoned with finely chopped vegetables, garlic or chilli sauce and wrapped in a focaccia – it is a basic ingredient of the daily diet. And he suggests that every family receives daily kebab vouchers. Based on estimates of 1.3 billion Doeners consumed in the country every year – 400,000 per day in Berlin alone – this subsidy program would cost 4 billion euros per year, Die Linke calculated.

Also greenstraditionally disinclined to recommend the consumption of meat, they raised the case in parliament“For young people – said Congresswoman Hanna Steinmueller – right now it’s as important a question as where they will move to when they leave home. I know it’s not an everyday problem for many people here”, he told fellow parliamentarians, “but I think that as representatives of the voters we are obliged to highlight these different perspectives.”

Scholz – approached at an event by a young German Turk who said: “I pay 8 euros… talk to Putin, I want to pay 4 Euros” – ruled out the idea of ​​a price cap as it was “not feasible” in a free market economy. He instead praised the “good work of the European Central Bank” in reducing inflation. But There was no shortage of people on social media calling for Angela Merkel’s returnclaiming that when she was in the chancellery “the Doener was under control”.

 
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