Kuwait Times

Chileans turn bakers, pizza makers as virus sparks business boom

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SANTIAGO: Chilean Pedro Campos hatched a plan to bake and sell homemade sourdough bread to neighbors after riots in Santiago last year shuttered the restaurant where he worked and the coronaviru­s pandemic left many shops closed. Business is now booming.

Campos is not alone in reinventin­g himself. More than 2 million Chileans have lost their jobs in the past year, the result of a one-two punch from the mass protests in 2019 and the pandemic this year.

Campos told Reuters the predicamen­t forced him to learn a new trade. “I needed to start making something,” he said. Now he doubts he’ll ever go back to work for someone else. The size of the informal sector - unreported, often clandestin­e jobs that range from selling masks on the street to ad hoc constructi­on work - is hard to measure. But the trend has prompted the government to launch a ‘Your Company in a Day’ campaign to legalize and cut red tape for entreprene­urs like Campos. In August alone, economy ministry data show that 16,545 companies were created, around a fifth more than a year earlier - despite the health crisis.

Small local businesses are flourishin­g on social media and chat groups like WhatsApp, offering items from food and beverages to jewelry and even bikes. “This shows that people know entreprene­urship can be an alternativ­e source of employment, and a way to reinvent themselves with economic support that allows them to get ahead,” economy ministry undersecre­tary Esteban Carrasco told reporters.

AndrÈs, who lost his job as a chef in a restaurant, joined with two partners to create a “virtual pizzeria,” whose menu he promotes with photos on Instagram. They deliver pizzas by bike. Andres - who didn’t want to give his last name because the work remains “undergroun­d” and informal - said booming sales were encouragin­g them to set up a bigger, better business model. “We have a lot of undergroun­d sales to wholesaler­s who buy 50 pizzas from us and resell them in their condos or to their contacts,” he said. —Reuters

 ??  ?? SANTIAGO: More than 2 million Chileans have lost their jobs in the past year, the result of a one-two punch from the mass protests in 2019 and the pandemic this year.
SANTIAGO: More than 2 million Chileans have lost their jobs in the past year, the result of a one-two punch from the mass protests in 2019 and the pandemic this year.

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