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Why
everything costs more
IRIN
News
July 08, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79148
What
is the crisis?
For the first time since 1973, the world has been hit by a combination
of record high food and fuel prices. The price of oilseeds and grains,
such as wheat and maize, has doubled since January 2006, with over
60 percent of the hike-taking place since January 2008, according
to the World Bank. Rice more than tripled between January and May
2008.
Prices have begun to
fall as the 2008 crop is being harvested, but recent floods in US
states producing maize and soya-beans, and poor weather conditions
in Australia have slowed the decline.
Since 2001, oil has rocketed
from US$20 a barrel to an unprecedented $140. The World Bank says
oil prices are now higher than any time in the last century, not
only pushing up the price of food in poor countries importing staple
grains and fuel, but also eroding their capacity to buy food.
Why
have prices shot up suddenly?
The short answer is that global cereal stocks have not kept pace
with growing demand, and neither has the oil supply. Stocks of cereals
have been declining worldwide since 2000, while demand has been
increasing at two to three percent per year.
In the last two years,
cereal stocks have fallen to levels last seen in the 1970s for two
main reasons: firstly, major wheat-producing countries such as Australia
suffered droughts in 2006 and 2007; secondly, the hike in fuel prices
saw the US and many European countries offer subsidies to their
farmers to grow grain for biofuel. The switch from growing food
to growing fuel pushed up prices by 30 to 70 percent, depending
on which study you read.
Some analysts have blamed
high food prices on the burgeoning economies of China, India and
some countries in sub-Saharan Africa, where more people can now
afford to include meat and other animal products in their diet,
which in turn has driven up the demand for grains used as feed.
However, the United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) says recent high commodity
prices do not seem to have originated in these emerging markets:
neither China nor India are big cereal importers in the 2007/08
season. In fact, China is exporting maize and India's wheat imports
are relatively small.
Various food analysts
say the production of grains has dropped because of rising chemical
fertiliser prices, which have doubled and even tripled in some parts
of the world, making it unaffordable to most farmers in developing
countries.
Other analysts have attributed
low cereal stocks to the cumulative effect of changes in the agricultural
policies of developed countries, particularly in Europe, where farm
subsidies have been shrinking, and a drop in investment in agricultural
research to develop high-yield varieties since the 1990s.
But the price spikes
recorded in 2008, particularly in rice, have been linked to export
restrictions imposed by rice-producing countries, including India,
China, Vietnam, Cambodia and Egypt, which together supplied around
40 percent of global rice exports in 2007, according to the International
Monetary Fund.
Didn't
anyone see the crisis coming?
Since
2006 the FAO has warned of a possible food price crisis in its periodic
updates on global cereal stocks.
What
has been the fallout of the crisis?
The impact of increasingly expensive food has been wide-ranging,
deepening poverty levels and pushing even more people into poverty.
According to a recent World Bank study, at least another 105 million
across the world will become poor.
Simulations in this study
suggest that in Africa alone nearly another 30 million people will
fall into poverty: in Sierra Leone the food crisis has raised poverty
by three percentage points, to 69 percent; in Djibouti, rising food
prices over the past three years are estimated to have increased
extreme poverty from 40 percent to 54 percent.
Various UN agencies have
warned that unaffordable food could drive up the number of undernourished
people in the world - already at 800 million - while poor
people have begun skipping meals or switching to cheaper and lower
quality cereals, affecting their health.
A recent FAO assessment
in Somalia found that 2.6 million people - approximately 35 percent
of the population, of which more than half are children - had been
affected by a nutrition crisis caused by drought and prolonged conflict.
The number of people needing humanitarian assistance in Somalia
could reach an estimated 3.5 million - half the total population
- by the end of 2008.
According to the World
Bank, even stable, high-growth countries are not immune to the damaging
effects of escalating food prices on child nutrition. In India,
for instance, 47 percent of children are stunted - double
the rate in sub-Saharan Africa, where 24 percent experience delayed
development - and nearly five times that of China, where just over
nine percent of children are stunted.
The UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) says 1.5 to 1.8 million more children in India are
at risk of malnourishment as households cut back on meals or switch
to less nutritious foods to cope with rising prices.
Expensive
food and fuel have also had political fallout: since 2007, high
prices have sparked violent protests in at least 17 countries, mostly
in Africa; earlier in 2008, the government of Haiti fell after week-long
protests.
The Organisation for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which is committed
to promoting democracy and assisting developing countries, noted
that each 10 percent increase in the prices of cereals adds nearly
$4.5 billion to the import bills of poorer countries.
An FAO study recently
noted that at least seven countries - Gambia, Liberia, Mauritania,
Niger, Zimbabwe, Jordan and Moldova - which have all chalked up
high levels of debt - could be forced to spend as much as two percent
of their gross domestic product on importing food. Most of these
countries are already struggling with chronic hunger, so soaring
food costs hold the threat of political instability.
Surely
higher food prices benefit small-scale farmers?
Yes,
logically they should. But very few subsistence farmers in Africa
produce surplus food, and are mostly net buyers. Simulated studies
by FAO found that rural households in countries where land was not
equitably distributed - which is the case in most developing countries
- would be worst affected.
The World Bank has also
found that although farmers who produce surplus food might be better
protected, even they might not benefit from the food price surge
because the cost of inputs like fuel, fertiliser and transportation
often rose faster than world market prices for food.
Agriculture experts say
that unless governments subsidise inputs, poverty levels in rural
households could deepen, and the prospects for beefing up global
cereal stocks look bleak. The World Bank has called for subsidies
aimed at poor and small-scale farmers for a limited period to boost
yields, as part of a package that should include investment in extension,
research and rural infrastructure.
When
will food prices come down?
High
prices may boost production in 2008, which in turn may push down
prices, provided there are no natural disasters. But any major expansion
of agricultural land in the short term is unlikely, says FAO, and
any increase in plantings of one crop would need to occur at the
expense of another. So, while the price of a certain food commodity
might fall, the prices of others might increase.
Short-term price forecasts
for food commodities are difficult because they are linked to other
markets, such as energy. A recent FAO/OECD medium-term outlook for
major agricultural commodities said prices were likely to remain
high for the next decade.
Can
the situation be turned around?
Many
agriculture experts are pushing for a new "Green Revolution",
which doubled cereal production between 1970 and 1995 in South Asia.
Money and investment in developing high-yielding varieties of maize,
wheat and rice, combined with access to pesticides, irrigation and
fertilizer, could have a dramatic impact.
But this would require
huge amounts of money: between $15 and $20 billion a year, according
to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
Aid agencies and other
non-governmental organizations are lobbying the G8 and other leaders
meeting in Japan this week to beef up investment in agriculture
in developing countries.
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