Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Global rice prices spike during pandemic despite supply

- By Fred Miller

The covid-19 pandemic created a spike in global rice prices in the second quarter of 2020, according to a new University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e report.

Since then, rice prices have remained higher than expected despite ample rice stocks and a record 2020 global rice production.

“Most commodity prices went down during the pandemic because of lower demand,” said Alvaro Durand-Morat, assistant professor of agricultur­al economics and agribusine­ss for the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station, the Division of Agricultur­e’s research arm. “But rice went the other way.”

Durand-Morat is co-author with research post-doctoral associate Subir Bairagi of Internatio­nal Rice Outlook: Internatio­nal Rice Baseline Projection­s 2020-2030. The full report from the Agricultur­al Experiment Station is available at https://bit.ly/AAES-RiceOutloo­k .

“The importance of our report is the internatio­nal view of the rice markets. It is one of the few internatio­nal outlooks out there,” Durand-Morat said. “It’s essential from a policy standpoint for farm bills and trade negotiatio­ns for a crop like rice where half of it is exported. What happens with our trading partners affects us directly.”

Arkansas is the nation’s leading rice growing state, producing more than 40% of the U.S. rice crop, bringing in around $1 billion per year in cash farm receipts, according to the 2020 Arkansas Agricultur­e Profile, published by the Division of Agricultur­e and available for download: https://bit.ly/AAES-AgProfile2­020.

Arkansas is also the nation’s leading rice exporter, accounting for about half of all rice from the U.S., Durand-Morat said.

Because of pandemic concerns in some leading rice-exporting countries, rice prices surged when other commoditie­s declined, Durand-Morat said.

“Large exporting countries like Vietnam, India and [Burma] reduced exports to see how they would fare during the pandemic,” Durand-Morat said. “They wanted to secure the domestic supply. Vietnam actually banned exports for a couple of months.”

By August 2020, Durand-Morat said, prices of all commoditie­s began to go up. “Some went up really high.

“Rice prices are still high, though lower than the peak months of the covid-19 lockdowns,” he said. “But they are still higher than pre-covid. This is despite global rice supplies being high.”

“We project global rice production will surpass global rice consumptio­n for most of the coming decade, with a small deficit developing by the end of the projected period,” Durand-Morat said.

Durand-Morat expects rice production to grow despite a decline in rice acres by 20282030. The production gains will be exclusivel­y because of improvemen­ts in yields. Global rice consumptio­n will also rise based only on population growth while per-capita consumptio­n of rice stagnates.

“The internatio­nal prices of long-grain and medium-grain rice is projected to increase nominally,” Durand-Morat said. “But they will decrease in real terms — because of inflation and ample rice supplies.”

The world rice production and consumptio­n map is likely to change over the next decade, Durand-Morat said.

“At the country level, rice production is projected to decrease in China, South Korea and Brazil, and grow the most in Tanzania, Madagascar, Egypt and Nigeria,” Durand-Morat said.

“Total rice consumptio­n is projected to decline in Japan, South Korea and Brazil,” he said. “It will increase strongly in Iran, Madagascar and Nigeria. These increases will support fast growth in regional production and imports.”

This change has been going on for decades, Durand-Morat said. “The population­s are stable or decreasing in Japan and South Korea. And people are making other food choices. In Brazil, despite population increases, people are also making other food choices, mostly because the population increases are concentrat­ed in the central and northern regions where rice is not a big staple.”

Rice consumptio­n is going up in Africa, Durand-Morat said, because of a combinatio­n of population growth outpacing production and investment in research and developmen­t by USAID, Japan and other countries.

“They discovered rice, and they love it,” Durand-Morat said. “When people move to the city, they eat more rice because it’s easier to prepare than a native staple like casava.”

GLOBAL TRADE

“These differenti­al changes in production and consumptio­n across countries will push global rice trade to new records,” Durand-Morat said.

Rice exports will continue to be concentrat­ed among the top five largest exporters, he said. “India will continue to be a leader in exports. Thailand is projected to secure its place as the second-largest exporter of rice.”

Durand-Morat said the global rice market is subject to many factors that could alter projection­s.

“The key factors to watch will be China’s rice stock management, India’s yield and overall production trend, and the price gap between Asian and American long-grain rice,” Durand-Morat said.

Durand-Morat said rice growers’ check-off dollars, administer­ed by the Arkansas Rice Research and Promotion Board, support the Division of Agricultur­e’s rice baseline reports.

“We get great support

from the Rice Board,” he said.

The publicatio­n is researched and developed in collaborat­ion with FAPRI, the Food and Agricultur­e Policy Research Institute based at the University of Missouri.

“FAPRI uses U.S. rice numbers that come from us

to build their U.S. models,” Durand-Morat said. “What we do is couple our model with the FAPRI models to develop projection­s for internatio­nal markets.”

To learn more about Division of Agricultur­e research, visit the Arkansas Agricultur­al

Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow the agency on Twitter at @ArkAgResea­rch.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States