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Inflation crisis: French students struggle to survive

20% of students in France live below the poverty line. Rising food prices and energy bills soaring are exacerbating their situation.

Our reporter Valérie Gauriat met some of those who are struggling to make ends meet, as well as the associations that are supporting them around the country.

The eyes of Baptiste and Mustafa light up at the sight of the kiwis in their shopping bag. "Kiwis are a luxury", Baptiste explains. They are two of a thousand students who took part in the food distribution organised in Paris by Cop1, a student association that was created during the COVID 19 pandemic to support students in need.

JR A’Weng, the general manager of Cop1, says he didn’t think that they would organise food distributions after the COVID lockdowns. But with the inflation hike, “it’s more and more difficult for students to cope, and there is real poverty».

Elodie failed her exams twice in Lyon during COVID lockdowns so she lost her grant. She started a new life in Rennes, in the northwest of France. She spent a month in her car before she could find student accommodation. 

Suffering from several disabilities, her medical expenses, only partly covered by social health insurance, eating – into her small budget. Her situation impacts her studies.

"I fall asleep during classes, I skip classes to see a social assistant or go to food distributions," she says.

In Lyon, France's third largest city in the southeast, and one of the country's most expensive, the federation of students associations, Gaelis, manages a so-called solidarity store where students can buy goods at 10% of the market price. 

Its President, Laure Morin, explains: "The lack of financial security that we can see amongst students is a huge mental burden for them. Students

Read more on euronews.com