Saint Petersburg (AFP) --- Just when
Russians thought it could not get any worse with the ruble tumbling as fast as
the oil prices on which their economy depends, the people of St Petersburg are
waking up to rationing.
But in President
Vladimir Putin's hometown, the martyr city that survived a nearly 900-day siege
in which thousands starved to death in World War II, it is not food and drink
that is being rationed, but metro tokens.
In one of the most
bizarre episodes of panic buying in a nation notorious for its hoarding
instincts in times of trouble, people have been buying up to 85,000 extra metro
tokens a day so they can save three rubles (five cents) when the price goes up
on January 1.
With more than 1.8
million sold so far in December the authorities had to step in and ban cashiers
from selling people more than two tokens at a time.
Signs of panic
buying have emerged in recent weeks with many hard-pressed households hoarding
sugar and buckwheat, one of the country's main staples, as the ruble at one
point lost one quarter of its value in just two days.
Worried about
rising inflation and the real value of their wages and savings plummeting,
poorer Russians have been stockpiling goods they think will hold their value.
"I get the
feeling people are investing in metro tokens," joked one passenger in
front of the ticket desk at Prospekt Veteranov station.
Normally only
around 15,000 metro tokens a day are sold in Russia 's second city, but as the
ruble crisis worsened, that increased to between 80,000 and 100,000 a day.
The price of the
tokens are set to rise from 28 roubles (45 euro cents) to 31 roubles (50 cents)
on January 1.
The ruble has lost
about 40 percent of its value against the dollar and euro this year.
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