Yes, it is there. Lots of elderly people selling small amounts of fruits and veggies to survive, and marketplaces full of peddlers, peddling inexpensive wares and foods.
The local trains between our resort town outside of Riga and Jurmala must have been from the 50's, complete with rattling noises and no lights. There were shady characters in some areas, but nothing terribly intimidating. We saw a group of thirteen year-olds drinking from a bottle of liquor at 11am on a street corner in Riga, and sad faces on many of the older crowd, worn out by years of oppression and deprivation, but there was also a kindness and warmth in people that was touching to see. Aidan, our 2-year-old son, got lots of smiles, and people helpes us with his stroller and with finding our way around.
The average salary is at around 10 thousand USD a year, and it must be hard to make ends meet in a city that can be quite pricey, and as a nation that knows that it wants good quality items and top of the line technology. I was lots of options for monthly payment plans in many stores, and offers for them on TV.
It is clear that as Europeans, seeing what their neighbors have must be difficult. They want more out of life than they had under Soviet rule, and I wonder how the push-pull of economic realities and limitations plays out for the average young Latvian.