the bbc population reporter, stephanie haggerty, spoke with people in four different countries who usedt by on a daily wage, but since lockdown, are struggling just to eat. food is not something that these people used to worry about. this pandemic doesn't treat everyone equally. when you are living on a daily wage, being out of work means no money for food. these are not animals, these are angry people. their world is being ripped from under them. the international labour organisation says that 1.6 billion people could be out of work as a result of this pandemic. that's half the world's workers. rosa and her daughter were let go from theirjobs were let go from theirjobs as domestic cleaners with no pay. now they rely on a food bank. governments all over the world have plans to help people on the bread line, but it's not getting to some fast enough. and there aren't always food banks to fill the gap. it can be a choice of respecting the lockdown or trying to survive. we wanted to speak to her again, but she left the city to her parents‘s village, where at least she can grow something to