Punta del Este is located on Uruguay’s southern coast. The
“St Tropez of South America” is how the real estate agents like to brand it. Monthly
holiday rents can easily run into five figures during high season (US dollars,
not pesos)
The city is so incongruous. Uruguay ranks 82nd in the world
in terms of GDP per capita, two places above Gabon.
Maria, a 20-year-old from Salto, a rural backwater in the
north-west of Uruguay, is paid 80 Uruguayan pesos (£1.80) an hour to clean up
after the ePrix’s VIP guests. “What can we do in Punta del Este? We can sit on
the beach, but we can’t afford to buy anything. We can’t even afford to get the
bus home,” she says.
The city’s elite residents require an army of Marias to
make their luxury lifestyles viable. Cleaners, cooks, waiters, gardeners,
nannies, valet parking attendants, lifeguards, security personnel; virtually
none of them live in Punta del Este proper. Instead, they trek in every morning
by bus or motorbike from periphery settlements, a cavalcade of under-paid
workers dedicated to keeping this urban anomaly going.
Sandra and Yino, live in a shanty on the edge of Maldonado,
a feeder town just outside Punta del Este. From the makeshift porch of their
three-room wooden shack, they can see the penthouse apartments curve along the
bay. Sandra works as a contract maid, Yino as a painter-decorator. Both make
the daily commute into the city. At around 35,000 pesos (£790) per month, their
combined earnings are above average for Uruguay. The national minimum wage
stands at around 10,000 pesos (£260). Yet the concentration of so much wealth
in one place means prices for basics such as food, clothing and medicines are
close to, if not higher, than London.
“It costs about 700 pesos a day to keep our family fed, and
that’s being as economical as possible,” says Sandra. “People think that when
the tourists go, the prices come down, but they don’t. The only thing that’s
cheap is the tranquility here.”
“The rich couldn’t live without us … the poor,” says Ingrid
Schmutz, a 44-year-old resident of El Placer, a long-standing shanty town.
No comments:
Post a Comment