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Mike In the NIGHT E436 - Food Wars - Food Riots - Food Shortages - Fertilizer Shortages
Mike In the NIGHT E436 - Food Wars - Food Riots - Food Shortages - Fertilizer Shortages - Food Inflation - Food price Taking OFF
Global food prices reach all-time high
The United Nations announced Friday that its index of global food prices increased 12.6% in March from the month before, the highest it’s been since the U.N. started tracking prices more than three decades ago.
Those price increases are being felt more keenly in developing countries, where many people spend a greater portion of their income on food.
Countries should not drastically subsidize food prices, he said. In Egypt, for example, the government subsidized bread so much that it now costs less than the grain that goes into it.
“That inevitably leads to a lot of waste, and even to developments where consumers are feeding bread to poultry because it’s cheaper than wheat,” Schmidhuber said.
Another thing countries shouldn’t do? Place export bans on products that are in high demand, like wheat and sunflower oil — two major exports from Ukraine.
Countries might be tempted to keep all that food for domestic use, but that has consequences, according to Joseph Glauber, senior research fellow with the International Food Policy Research Institute.
“You take that out of the world market, that means that the world market has to find other suppliers. It drives the price up in world markets even higher,” he said.
Glauber said importing countries should be flexible and willing to seek out alternative suppliers.
“One of the reasons there’s been so much concern is that Ukraine accounts for such a large share of what’s traded in the world,” he said. “Both Ukraine and Russia account for about 12% of calories that are traded in the world.”
Farmers should respond to the high prices by planting more crops, Glauber added. But that’s a solution that will take months — so food prices will likely stay high until at least 2023.
The U.N. is also proposing a system that would reduce import costs for developing countries.
“Countries that are dependent on food inputs and don’t have the money to buy should get access to credit so that they are able to do so,” Schmidhuber said.
Credit might also be provided to make it cheaper to import fertilizer and other materials that would help them grow food locally, he added.
Update (April 11, 2022): This article has been updated to include additional information heard on “Marketplace Morning Report.”
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