They explain that most street vendors take expensive loans to buy merchandise to sell and repay their debts from their daily sales proceeds. The lockdown has left many already in debt and with unsold winter-specific merchandise.
In Lajpat Nagar, for example, Salim estimates 80 per cent of vendors already have outstanding loans; he himself is yet to repay a loan of Rs 50,000.
It is the same story across Delhi.
“The situation is even worse among vendors in smaller cities who aren’t as well off as Delhi vendors,” says Arbind Singh, national coordinator, NASVI.
Singh estimates that across India, as many as 80 per cent street vendors have no bank accounts or ration cards. “This means, no savings, no social security, nothing,” he says, adding, “They need much more support to get through this phase than just a loan.”