The Germans demand a cap on the price of kebabs

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07/05/2024 18:37
– UPDATED 07/05/2024 18:37

The Germans demand a cap on the price of kebabs. Scholz: “I am asked everywhere where I go”. The rising cost of doner kebabs has led to more and more calls in Germany for a government subsidy program to keep the country’s inflation-wracked favorite affordable, while politicians report it is frequently cited as a concern in discussions with voters. (Continue after photo)

The Germans demand a cap on the price of kebabs

Chancellor Olaf Scholz has become so used to being asked about the price of kebabs during public appearances that his government has even taken to social media to explain that the price hike is partly due to rising wage and energy costs. “It’s quite striking that everywhere I go, mainly from young people, I’m asked if there shouldn’t be a price brake on doner,” Scholz said.

The far-left party Die Linke has become the latest to address the issue, calling in a proposal it wants to present to parliament for a price cap on Dönerpreisbremse, or doner kebab, similar to that introduced in some parts of the country to control high rents. The organization says that in some cities kebabs already cost €10, up from €4 just two years ago. (Continue after photo)
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The kabab, the national problem in Germany

The party recommends a maximum price of 4.90 euros and 2.90 euros for young people, especially those on low incomes, for whom this dish – thin slices of grilled meat topped with finely chopped vegetables, garlic or sauce chilies and placed in a folded flatbread – it’s a daily staple. It is proposed that every household receives daily Doner vouchers.

Sales of kebabs – introduced to Germany by Turkish immigrants who adapted them to local tastes – are estimated at €7 billion a year in Germany.

Based on the roughly 1.3 billion kebabs that are consumed each year in the country – 400,000 per day in Berlin alone – such a subsidy program would cost €4 billion annually, Die Linke calculated.
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What the sellers say

Deniz, a doner vendor at a kiosk near Berlin’s Friedrichstrasse station, where the cost has risen from 3.90 euros to 7 euros in less than two years, said he doesn’t see the price coming down anytime soon. “We were forced to increase the price, because of the explosion in rent, energy and food prices,” he said. “People talk to us about ‘Dönerflation’ all the time, like we’re fooling them, but it’s completely out of our control.” Source: The Guardian.


The article is in Romanian

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