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Santo Domingo.- A group of social organizations yesterday announced support for the boycott on chicken meat Tuesday , to pressure producers and intermediaries to slash poultry prices.
The groups also call on consumers to boycott the meat in every remaining Tuesday in July, noting that it should be sold at no more than RD $39 per pound. Organizations spokesmen Roberto Abreu and Joaquin Luciano asked the government to intervene to protect consumers, to put a stop to what they view as speculation by vendors without control over the meat which Dominicans consume most. The organizers also rebuked the Poultry Commission’s lobbying in the Chamber of Deputies, noting that it’s an issue which the Consumer Protection Agency should resolve. "Pro-Consumidor has done an excellent job on fixing its position as to what chicken’s price per pound should be." from dominican today |
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Chicken in supermarkets is expensive and nasty, but from some colmados you are looking at Around 45-55pesos Lb depending where you are (ime) which is okay in my books. I can't imagine the bottom line making much on anything less. But it gives people something to think about on a Tuesday, maybe eat pork that day, mix it up a bit, or just buy enough on Monday
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For people with well paying jobs 55 pesos a pound is just fine - but what about everyone else who could only afford chicken (not pork or beef) and now can't even afford that? I can get chicken at the pollera for 41 pesos, why should I have to pay 59 (jumbo santiago) pesos for a pound of not-so-fresh chicken in the supermarket?
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"Don't-buy-on-whatever-day" boycotts give the protester the illusion of effectiveness. It's not logical. Same for such attempts to cripple the oil industry in the US by not filling up on a given date. The only real boycott is one where less of a product is bought, or none at all, over an extended period. One day isn't gonna cut it.
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EVERYTHING THAT IS SOLD HERE....... I'm sure the pig, fish goat and cow farmers are quite happy to have a small once-a-week spike in the sales of their product. Boycotts tend to be a "feel good" tactic that rarely works. But the boycotters feel really, really important. |
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For people with well paying jobs 55 pesos a pound is just fine - but what about everyone else who could only afford chicken (not pork or beef) and now can't even afford that? I can get chicken at the pollera for 41 pesos, why should I have to pay 59 (jumbo santiago) pesos for a pound of not-so-fresh chicken in the supermarket? and trust me, the poorest people are likely to pay higher prices anyways because they often buy in a colmado: one platano, one egg, few slices of salami. at the end of the day they pay more per pound/item vecause they cannot to afford anything in bulk. |
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