A country's ability to take care of its needy people speaks volumes about its well being than mere numbers Mahlet Fasil & Kalkidan Yibeltal A pensioner for 23 years, Getahun Assefa, 83, of the former Imperial Guard, recalls nostalgically the days when it was possible to get by with his meager retirement benefit of less than US$20 (342 birr), small as it was. But the soaring cost of living in the past couple of years has made it almost impossible to make his ends met. Trying to lead a family of four (his wife and three children) with his retirement money means Getahun's life is marked by a struggle for survival on a daily base. If he is to lead a somewhat dignified life, the government needs to "increase my pay", he told Addis Standard.
Getahun is not alone in this; his ache reverberates in endless households throughout the country. The inadequate sums the state pays in varied forms of benefits are the sources of misery for thousands of senior citizens who had contributed their fair share to the country in their days of youth.
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