Albuquerque Journal

Worldwide food prices approach a record high

News reinforces inflation concerns

- GLOBAL MEGAN DURISIN

Global food costs jumped last month, extending a march toward a record and piling more inflationa­ry pressure on consumers and government­s. A United Nations index tracking staples from wheat to vegetable oils climbed 3% to a fresh decade high in October, threatenin­g even higher grocery bills for households that have already been strained by the pandemic. That could also add to central banks’ inflation worries and risks worsening global hunger that is at a multiyear high.

Bad weather hit harvests around the world this year, freight costs soared and labor shortages have roiled the food supply chain from farms to supermarke­ts.

An energy crisis has also proved a headache, forcing vegetable greenhouse­s to go dark and causing a knock-on risk of bigger fertilizer bills for farmers.

“The issue with the inputs and fertilizer­s, and its implicatio­ns for next year’s crop is a concern,” said Abdolreza Abbassian, a senior economist at the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on. “By now, the market has factored in most of the supply and demand issues. But the market has by no means factored in next year’s prospects in production.”

Some regions will likely continue to face food-security challenges. The UN on Thursday raised its outlook for global wheat trade to a record as purchases climb in Middle Eastern nations from Iran to Afghanista­n. Droughts there slashed crops, boosting dependency on imported grain at a time when prices are soaring.

“This came at the worst time for those countries because world prices are just so high,” Abbassian said. “We cannot afford a bad year in 2022 for important crops.”

The price gains are stirring memories of spikes in 2008 and 2011 that contribute­d to global food crises. While it takes time for commodity costs to trickle to grocery shelves, officials in such areas as North Africa and Turkey are already facing difficulti­es shielding shoppers from the blow.

Bigger expenses for farmers could also curb Northern Hemisphere plantings now underway, according to the FAO.

October’s food price gains were driven mostly by higher costs for grains and vegetable oils, the FAO said in a report.

Still, there are signs of stabilizin­g prices for some foods, with meat and sugar falling last month, Abbassian said. Global grain and oilseed supplies are proving sufficient to meet demand, and prices for rice — one of the world’s vital staples — remain subdued, he said.

“On the demand side, we’re beginning to get a better hold of what we actually need, so that uncertaint­y is perhaps diminishin­g,” he said.

 ?? ANDREY RUDAKOV/BLOOMBERG ?? Combine harvesters unload wheat grain into a truck during the summer harvest on a farm near Stavropol, Russia, on July 9. October’s food price gains were driven mostly by higher costs for grains and vegetable oils, the U.N. said in a report.
ANDREY RUDAKOV/BLOOMBERG Combine harvesters unload wheat grain into a truck during the summer harvest on a farm near Stavropol, Russia, on July 9. October’s food price gains were driven mostly by higher costs for grains and vegetable oils, the U.N. said in a report.

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