Ref: Yang berdiam di Kuwait diharap bisa memberi komentar terhadap tulisan 
Kuwait Times ini.

http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/04/18/expat-parents-feel-the-pinch-of-rising-cost-of-living-in-kuwait-living-the-low-life/

Expat parents feel the pinch of rising cost of living in Kuwait – Living the 
low life 
A five-member family living in Kuwait, whose total income is less than KD 
1,000, is considered as living under the poverty line, according to the United 
Nations criteria based on the average per capita income of an individual living 
in Kuwait

The increasingly high cost of living, coupled with certain measures taken by 
the government that have negatively impacted the expatriates, parenting in 
Kuwait is becoming ever more challenging, particularly for expats.

Rene is a Filipino expat worker, whose wife works at a beauty salon. He works 
as a nurse in a private clinic, drawing KD 400 as salary, while his wife brings 
home KD 200. There was a time when the couple wanted to keep their two 
children, aged nine and three, with them in Kuwait, but with an increase in 
tuition fees and rising cost of living, he decided to simply send them back to 
his native land, the Philippines. “I want to save some money and set it aside 
so that I can start a business some day.

If they had continued to stay here, I could have been able to afford it, but 
then there would not have been anything left for the family or future plans by 
the end of the day,” he lamented. “I cannot even save a single dinar as most of 
my wife’s salary and mine is just enough to fulfill the needs of the family.

I could save nothing even after working for years here,” he said. From school 
fees to food, paying for nanny and house rent, he would spend all the money. So 
much so that he could not even afford to buy a new pair of shoes for himself, 
he stated. “My God, I need to ensure the survival of my family. My wife is 
already fed up because we cannot even save a penny.

So, I told her to just return and join my children while I work here. It is 
really very hard to convince her. I love my family, and want them to stay with 
me, but if the situation continues as it is now, I think, it will be more 
practical for us to simply live separately,” he said. If Rene’s family chooses 
to stay back in the Philippines, he will be able to save some money from his 
salary. “Even though both of us are earning KD 600, most of the money goes 
towards housing needs. Since I have two children, most of the flat owners will 
not accept room rentals, leaving me with little choice but to rent the entire 
flat which would cost me KD 240.

How much will then be left out from KD 600? We will have half that money, and 
will have to make do with that much amount. We have to eat every day, pay 
tuition fees for my child, and pay some amount to my other child’s nanny.

How much is left with me? I will have to seek financial help from my 
colleagues,” he admitted. In a study published in the local media, it was 
reported that a five-member family living in Kuwait, whose total income is less 
than KD 1,000, is considered as living under the poverty line, according to the 
United Nations criteria based on the average per capita income of an individual 
living in Kuwait.

The UN criteria for calculating poverty considers such families whose income is 
60 percent below the average national income to be living under the poverty 
line.

The average family income was calculated as being KD 1,850, and 60 percent of 
this amount comes to KD 1,000, the level considered the poverty line for a 
five-member family in Kuwait. Even some Kuwaiti families have been complaining 
about the ever-increasing cost of living in the country. Abu Tariq has four 
children from his second wife. “Even as we receive some food from the 
government, it is never enough. I earn slightly more than KD 1,000 from my 
government job, and receive some amount for my small children, but it turns out 
to be little. I have my own family villa.

My son and a daughter from my first wife are also working now and have their 
own families as well, but considering the increased cost of almost everything 
in Kuwait, KD 1,000 for me is really not enough,” Abu Tariq pointed out. 
Musaffar, a Palestinian, also had a similar complaint. “My children are already 
in college, and considering the high tuition fees charged in college, my salary 
is never enough. So, I accepted some part time jobs to help me out with the 
expenses.

Hamdullah, I am surviving but am really suffering. We have already given up on 
some of the luxuries that our family used to enjoy, like eating in expensive 
restaurants or traveling. No more can we indulge ourselves like this; in fact, 
we have completely stopped eating out,” he said.

By Ben Garcia, Kuwait Times Staff


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke