San Antonio Express-News

Food prices at 6-year high and may climb

- By Agnieszka de Sousa and Megan Durisin

Global food prices reached a sixyear high in December and are likely to keep rising into 2021, adding to pressure on household budgets while hunger surges around the world.

A U.N. gauge of food prices has jumped 18 percent since May, as adverse weather, government measures to safeguard supplies and robust demand helped fuel rallies across agricultur­al commoditie­s from grains to palm oil.

Prices likely will climb further, the U.N.'S Food & Agricultur­e Organizati­on said.

The spike threatens to push up broader inflation, making it harder for central banks to provide more stimulus to shore up economies, while stirring memories of food price crises a decade ago.

It's bad news for consumers whose incomes have been hurt by the COVID-19 crisis, and it adds to concerns about global food security that's being affected by conflicts and weather shocks.

That's especially true for the poorest countries having to contend with limited social safety nets and purchasing power, the FAO says.

“We do at this point see more factors pushing up global food prices,” said Abdolreza Abbassian, a senior economist at the FAO. “Food inflation is a reality. While people have lost income, they are as we speak going through a tremendous­ly difficult hardship.”

Corn and soy futures rallied to six-year highs as drought threatens crops in South America at a time of surging Chinese demand, while palm oil — used in about half of all supermarke­t goods — is near a 10year high.

Protection­ist measures also are propping up markets, with Argentinia­n farmers planning a protest strike after the government suspended corn export licenses, while wheat giant Russia will curb grain exports from mid-february to tame food inflation.

Commoditie­s priced in dollars — often seen as a hedge against inflation — should remain supported as the greenback falls further this year, Abbassian said.

Plus, an economic recovery in some parts of the world probably will fuel consumer spending and food demand, with weather risks and export restrictio­ns from some grain suppliers aiding prices in the short term, he said.

Weather concerns, government interventi­on and strong exports to

China could push agricultur­al markets higher this year, according to Rabobank Internatio­nal.

Soy prices have become expensive enough that the world will need to ration demand, said Joe Stone, head of crop merchant Cargill Inc.'s agricultur­e supply chain and corporate trading.

The FAO'S food price index has risen for the past seven months, with annual prices capping the highest average in three years. Still, costs remain well below peaks in 2008 and 2011, when soaring prices caused political and economic instabilit­y around the world and grain export bans tightened supply.

“Commodity price inflation is very real, but we're still nothing like a decade ago,” said Tim Benton, research director in emerging risks at Chatham House in London. “I am reasonably confident that it's not going to lead to big things as per a decade ago. But still, COVID has the potential to upset things in terms of flows of goods, in terms of access to labor.”

 ?? Mel Evans / Associated Press file photo ?? A U.N. gauge of food prices has jumped 18 percent since May, as adverse weather, government measures to safeguard supplies and robust demand helped fuel rallies across agricultur­al commoditie­s from grains to palm oil.
Mel Evans / Associated Press file photo A U.N. gauge of food prices has jumped 18 percent since May, as adverse weather, government measures to safeguard supplies and robust demand helped fuel rallies across agricultur­al commoditie­s from grains to palm oil.

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