San Antonio Express-News

Food costs ease from near record, offering inflation respite

- By Megan Durisin

Global food prices declined from near a record high at the end of last year, offering some respite to consumers and government­s facing a wave of inflationa­ry pressures.

A United Nations index tracking everything from grains to meat fell 0.9 percent in December, potentiall­y helping to ease the run-up in prices of grocery store products. Still, the gauge remains near 2011’s all-time high, and average prices jumped about 28 percent in 2021, the most in 14 years.

Prices have surged on the back of harvest setbacks and high freight rates, as well as labor shortages and an energy crisis that hit supply chains. Those issues will remain at the fore as farmers face uncertain weather and the prospect of fertilizer shortages in the months ahead. The costs have trickled through to supermarke­ts, piling pressure on officials and household budgets and worsening hunger, particular­ly in poor nations.

Food costs are unlikely to stabilize for a while yet, according to Abdolreza Abbassian, a senior economist at the U.N.’S Food and

Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

“Nothing fundamenta­lly changed over the last two to three months to make us feel any degree of optimism that the food market is going to resettle at more steady or even lower prices,” he said. “All of the uncertaint­ies are right there, they haven’t disappeare­d, which means that anything is still possible.”

The fall in food prices prices last month was mainly driven by vegetable oils and sugar, the FAO said Thursday.

Anger over inflation recently led to violent protests in Kazakh

stan, while Sri Lanka unveiled a $1 billion package to temper concerns over pricey food and medical items. Countries including Ukraine, Russia and Argentina have also taken steps to keep food costs in check.

Weather worries abound across major crop suppliers, as the La Niná weather pattern disrupts typical growing conditions. Dryness in parts of Brazil and Argentina is trimming expectatio­ns for bountiful soy and corn harvests. In Malaysia, recent floods have inundated some palm-oil plantation­s. And Australia faced a November deluge that curbed the quality of its wheat.

The recent energy crunch has sent fertilizer prices higher too, threatenin­g to further add to foodproduc­tion costs. There are already signs that farmers are cutting back on nutrient purchases or shifting from grains to less fertilizer-intensive crops.

Inflation is also contributi­ng to the world’s hunger crisis, with higher prices for everything from fuel to housing cutting into what people can spend on food. Roughly a 10th of the global population was undernouri­shed in 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit — and food costs have jumped much more since then.

In other moves to combat rising prices or tight supplies, Thailand this week imposed a ban on hog exports until early April. President Joe Biden promised to “fight for fairer prices” for farmers and consumers in a bid to tackle meat-price inflation, while purchase limits have been reintroduc­ed in hundreds of Australian supermarke­ts as cases of the omicron virus strain hobble supply chains.

 ?? Christophe­r Occhicone / Bloomberg ?? Tourists wait in line to purchase food from a street vendor in New York. Grocery prices are easing from record highs.
Christophe­r Occhicone / Bloomberg Tourists wait in line to purchase food from a street vendor in New York. Grocery prices are easing from record highs.

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