When Portugal was suffering in the depths of the global financial crisis, Marina Pereira followed thousands of her compatriots and took a job in Angola as it rode the wave of an oil boom.
However, now the collapse in global crude prices has hammered the southwest African country’s economy and sent Pereira and many others like her heading back to Europe.
“At the start I was earning 4,200 euros [US$4,500] a month working in a spa. I was housed and fed, it was paradise,” the 33-year-old osteopath said.
In 2012 she had moved to Luanda, but after a dream start, euphoria began to give way to disillusion.
“I started to be paid in kwanzas, the local currency, and my monthly income dropped to 1,000 euros. You can only change money on the black market, at a really bad rate,” she said, eventually leaving as the cost of living got too high.
Her return in 2015 to Portugal, then barely out of a deep recession, was a brutal experience. On a wage of 650 euros a month for working in a gym, she said that “it’s not enough to have a decent quality of life.”
About 300,000 Portuguese colonists fled Angola as violence flared in the run-up to independence in 1975. Forty years later, Portugal is witnessing a new wave of retornados — returnees — leaving the African nation as it wrestles with its own economic woes.
The exodus began in 2015 and is still going on, according to Paulo Vieira, president of the Portuguese-Angolan chamber of commerce.
The end of Angola’s bloody 27-year civil war in 2002, combined with high global oil prices, unleashed rapid development, with Luanda often compared to Dubai.
GDP growth peaked at more than 20 percent in 2007, but the decline in oil prices, poor governance and lack of investment have seen growth collapse to less than 2 percent last year.
Although Angola remains Africa’s biggest oil producer alongside Nigeria, revenues have halved.
The Angolan government, reliant on oil for 70 percent of its budget, has put the brakes on public spending, stopping thousands of building projects and imposed currency restrictions, hitting the construction industry.
“Several Portuguese companies in Angola can no longer pay their staff because they are having problems repatriating profits,” said Ricardo Pedro Gomes, president of Portugal’s construction industry association.
“Of the 100,000 Portuguese construction workers in Angola before the economic crisis, there are only a few thousand left. And there are salary delays going back up to a year,” construction union leader Albano Ribeiro said.
Pedro Dias, 42, a salesman for an Angolan electronics company, saw his friends leave, one by one, before returning to Portugal himself.
In Luanda, he was paid up to 3,000 euros a month and the company paid for his accommodation, car and food — a good income to support his wife and three children back home.
However, with the currency restrictions, bank transfers to Portugal have stopped.
“I had to leave, my family have to eat,” he said.
“If the situation improves, I’ll go back,” he said, recalling “the smell of Africa and the savannah.”
Expat life in Luanda is full of pitfalls and politics is off-limits in a country ruled by Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos for about 37 years.
Pereira tells of being attacked in broad daylight “with a gun pointed at my head by 10 or 11 year-old children” and almost dying after catching malaria and yellow fever.
Despite these hair-raising experiences, Pereira said she misses her old life, and is planning to move to another former Portuguese colony, Sao Tome and Principe.
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