Food Prices Soar Worlwide
www.comcast.net/news/arti...
From subsistence farmers eating rice in Ecuador to gourmets feasting on escargot in France, consumers worldwide face rising food prices. Freak weather is a factor. But so are profound changes in the global economy, including higher oil prices, lower food reserves and growing consumer demand in China and India.
The world’s poorest nations still harbor the greatest hunger risk. Clashes over bread in Egypt killed at least two people last week, and similar food riots broke out in Burkina Faso and Cameroon this month.
But food protests now crop up even in Italy. And while the price of spaghetti has doubled in Haiti, the cost of miso is packing a hit in Japan.
“It’s not likely that prices will go back to as low as we’re used to,” said Abdolreza Abbassian, economist and secretary of the Intergovernmental Group for Grains for the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. “Currently if you’re in Haiti, unless the government is subsidizing consumers, consumers have no choice but to cut consumption. It’s a very brutal scenario, but that’s what it is.”
In the long term, prices are expected to stabilize. However, consumers still face at least 10 years of more expensive food, according to preliminary FAO projections.
As of December, 37 countries faced food crises, and 20 had imposed some sort of food-price controls.
Already, there’s a lot of suspicion among consumers.
“They don’t understand why prices have gone up like this,” said Nicole Watelet, general secretary at the Federation of French Bakeries and Pastry Enterprises. “They think that someone is profiting from this. But it’s not us. We’re paying.”
Food costs worldwide spiked 23 percent from 2006 to 2007, according to the FAO. Grains went up 42 percent, oils 50 percent and dairy 80 percent.
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Double Whammy
First, anything priced in dollars gets hammered by unfunded runaway federal spending (inflation). Then the brilliant leaders decide it is a good idea to make fuel out of food.
More on Food Inflation (OneVoice didn't understand inflation
last time I posted this over the weekend)
www.kpcnews.com/articles/...
“Food consumers worldwide are going to have to pay more,” Hurt said. “We ended 2007 with our monthly inflation rate on food nearly 5 percent higher. I think we’ll see times in 2008 where the food inflation rate might be as much as 6 percent. “I also think we’ll have discussions about food security in 2008. We’ll have discussions about whether we should allow the foreign sector to buy our food. Is food a strategic item that we need to keep in our country?”
For some U.S. crops, it’s almost too late. The 2007 U.S. wheat crop is virtually sold out, while domestic soybean stocks soon will fall below a 20-day supply. Corn inventories are stronger, but with demand from export markets, the livestock industry and ethanol plants, supplies also could be just as scarce for the 2008 crop. The condition could become more serious if adverse weather trims U.S. crop yields this summer and fall. The situation is reminiscent of another run on U.S. grain one generation ago, Hurt said.“We’ve seen the relationship of the U.S. dollar to foreign currencies change substantially in the last few years,” he said. “The European euro has increased in value relative to the U.S. dollar by 40 percent. What that means is that with the same number of euros, the Europeans can buy 40 percent more in the United States than they would have been able to buy three or four years ago.”
“The last time we had this kind of uncertainty on food supplies was the early 1970s when the former Soviet Union became a major buyer of wheat in the United States. In the fall of 1972 they were such aggressive buyers that they essentially bought the pantry out of our available wheat supplies. In 1973 we also virtually ran out of soybeans. The U.S. Congress and president responded by saying we cannot let the rest of the world have our strategic food supply, so they embargoed all foreign soybean shipments until we could replenish the supply.”
www.nctimes.com/articles/...
* Wheat Price Surges
* Wheat Levels at lowest since WWII
* Wheat historically trades at $3 to $7 a bushel.
This week, futures of spring wheat ---- which produces the flour used in hearth breads, rolls, croissants, bagels and pizza crust ---- were close to $18 a bushel on the Minneapolis Grain Exchange. They climbed as high as $24 in late February.
http://ethanolproducer.co...
Bakers Raise Concerns
Bread isn’t the only thing rising in bakeries across the country. Wheat prices have reached an all-time high and bakers are concerned that the “commodity crisis” has reached a point of no return. “Last year I was paying about $14 for a hundred pound bag of flour. Last week I was quoted $57 for that same bag of flour…bakers can’t keep up with those increases and we will be forced to make cuts or go under.”
It´s been going up for a
It´s been going up for a long time. Considering the co2 hysteria, expect it to go higher.
I'm sure someone is letting me eat cake
"Walls are stronger than the men that defend them."
Khan