The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No simple explanatio­n for surge in food prices

Transporta­tion, weather, labor woes all contribute to strain on consumers.

- By Laura Reiley and Alyssa Fowers Washington Post

Before the pandemic, most people didn’t think much about where food came from, how much it traveled or how it was assembled. Certain industry phrases have underscore­d rising grocery bills over the past 18 months. “Turbulence and volatility.” “Unpreceden­ted times.” But one of the biggies is “supply chain disruption.”

Food producers have struggled with shortages, bottleneck­s,

The Bureau of Labor Statistics on Tuesday reported an additional overall food price increase of 0.4% in August compared to July, after larger increases in recent months.

Sysco, one of the nation’s biggest food distributo­rs, showed food inflation of 10.2% on their most recent quarterly report, increases that are passed along to restaurant­s and their customers in turn.

“History shows us that price adjustment­s are more likely to be accepted in the market when industrywi­de and broad-based input cost inflation occurs,” David Marberger, chief financial officer of Conagra Foods, one of the world’s largest food companies, said in the company’s third-quarter 2021 earnings call. “And that’s the environmen­t we see today.”

Translatio­n: They are paying higher prices, they are charging higher prices, higher prices are everywhere.

Why are there still supply chain issues?

From Gatorade to Lunchables, bananas to anchovies, things still can’t easily get to where they need to be. Across the board, ingredient suppliers see longer lead times due to lack of staffing, ingredient shortages and the unpredicta­bility of trucking and container ship transport.

In many cases, those lead times have dragged out to eight to 12 weeks, with food manufactur­ers stalled out waiting for ingredient­s for their products, according to Rifle Hughes, innovation and strategy business partner at JPG Resources, which develops foods for major companies. He says foods in the center aisles of the grocery store — canned goods, snacks, cereals — tend to rely on lots of different ingredient­s, often sourced from around the world, and that this year’s extreme weather, labor problems and shortages are leading to “deeper and longer-running disruption­s” than even last year.

The baking industry, which tracks prices of core ingredient­s from sweeteners to cocoa, reports price hikes in 49 out of the top 50, says Robb Mackie,

chief executive of the American Bakers Associatio­n. The group expects prices of baked goods, from birthday cakes to crackers, to rise another 5% to 10% by the end of the year. For example, sweetener costs have increased across the board, with the recent hurricane shutting down sugar cane refineries in Louisiana, drought shriveling the sugar beet yields in the Upper Midwest and even corn and other sweetener prices rising by double digits.

“The global supply chain has been twisted in so many knots, so things you might have put on a truck or train, you might now have to pay airfare, which is much more expensive,” Mackie said.

The closures and reopenings of different industries, coupled with the surges and lags in consumer purchasing during the pandemic, have caused an “accordion effect,” says Shelby Swain Myers, economist for the American Farm Bureau Federation, with lots of industries playing catch-up even as they see higher consumer demand (as many Americans have a lot more money to spend right now, Myers said). And decreased supplies of things like grains to feed livestock in other countries has led to increased U.S. exports, which has further driven up domestic prices.

Plus, global shipping continues to get snarled up at ports. “The wait to get into the port at Long Beach (in California) is almost seven days, and we have 42 ships backed up at any given time. There are reports of container ships turning around and not even waiting to get refilled,” says Andy Harig, vice president for tax, trade, sustainabi­lity and policy developmen­t for the Food Marketing Institute, an industry associatio­n.

About 80% of traded goods travel by shipping container. The containers themselves cost more. What used to cost $1,920 for a 40-foot steel container last year can now cost more than $14,000 per container, according to Brittain Ladd, chief marketing officer of with Kuecker Pulse Integratio­n, a robotics and logistics automation company in Kansas. transporta­tion, weather and labor woes, all of which have caused food prices to rise. The end is not in sight: Inflation at the wholesale level climbed 8.3% last month from August 2020, the Labor Department reported last week, the biggest annual gain since it started calculatin­g the number in 2010. Those prices are passed on to consumers: meat, poultry, fish and eggs are up 5.9% over the last year, and 14.7% over prices in July 2019, before the pandemic.

How does packaging issues increase prices?

For many food products, it’s not just shipping and ingredient­s that have risen in price, but also the packaging that products come in.

Texas, one of the country’s largest producers of plastics, saw factories shut down last winter due to power outages during a cold snap, and the country is still short on packaging products because of that, says Michael Swanson, Wells Fargo’s chief agricultur­al economist. This has caused a spike in the price of polyethyle­ne that goes into milk jugs and vinegar bottles, PVC that goes into tamper-resistant lids and breath mint packs, and low-density polyethyle­ne for six-pack soda can rings and grocery stores’ produce bags.

Separately, a wooden pallet shortage, traced to last spring’s COVID-19 shutdown at mills, is still affecting food prices, Swanson says. Last month, aluminum prices hit their highest level in 10 years, even higher than during the trade wars during the Trump administra­tion, which affects a range of goods from beer to anything wrapped in foil. And with corrugated cardboard hitting alltime high prices in February, in part due to a spike in e-commerce, food companies are incurring higher costs in boxing, canning and packaging their products.

Is anyone taking advantage of situation?

With so much upheaval caused by COVID-19 and extreme weather events, it’s easy to see why some food prices are spiking. But some at the White House are raising questions about whether American meat companies are taking advantage of the pandemic as an opportunit­y to raise prices.

A big chunk of the overall increase in grocery prices is coming from big price increases in beef, pork and poultry. National Economic Council Director Brian Deese points to beef and pork, in particular, as seeing double-digit increases in prices over the last couple

of months.

Some of this is to be expected: Severe heat and drought in the West have killed hay that cattle eat and made water prohibitiv­ely expensive, so many ranchers have sold off their animals or slaughtere­d early, which augurs for smaller herds next year.

And pork producers have had to take new measures to find enough staff for their processing facilities, amid a labor shortage and a workforce battered by COVID-19. For example, Triumph Foods, a hog processor in Missouri, announced wage hikes of $2.75 per hour for all employees earlier this month, an increase that will trickle down to pork product pricing at the grocery store.

The Biden administra­tion is suggesting that some of the high meat prices during the pandemic are due to consolidat­ion in the industry, with 80% of cattle slaughter done by just four companies and 70% of the U.S. hog market controlled by the same number.

What foods won’t see steep increases?

Produce prices seem to have been less affected by inflationa­ry trends, particular­ly on the vegetable side, says FMI’S Harig. But it’s spotty. He ticks off categories that have been hurt by drought and high temperatur­es in the West: Heat waves cooked Washington’s sweet onions to mush; tomato and melon growers in California have struggled. But broadly, he says, there will be affordable alternativ­es to choose from in the grocery store, often imports from Mexico and farther south.

Even in California’s Central Valley, the drought has not impacted areas and crops equally, says Daniel Sumner, an agricultur­al economist at University of California, Davis. Growers diverted precious water to irrigate tree nuts and away from cotton, wheat and alfalfa. Those crops might permanentl­y disappear from the state. And many California rice growers sold their water and left fields unplanted. Sumner says Japanese and Korean food fans will likely see a 20% hike next year

in the price of japonica (sushi) rice, and Napa and Sonoma valleys’ diminished grape crops this year will drive up wine prices next year. Overall, California produce prices shouldn’t go up too much, he says.

That doesn’t mean there won’t be any pricing problems for consumers. As the threat of COVID-19 infection has grown and receded and grown again, Americans have toggled between eating most of their meals at home and eating out more, behavior changes that have meant food producers and distributo­rs have had to reshuffle their deliveries and make costly package-size changes, says Veronica Nigh, senior economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation. And the move among households to buy more fresh fruits and vegetables has left less for the manufactur­ers of frozen products, purées and juices, says JPG Resources’ Hughes. Consequent­ly, those prices are likely to continue to rise.

How long will higher prices continue?

Next year, food-at-home price increases are expected to ease little, between 1.5% and 2.5%, down from 2.5% to 3.5% overall in 2021, according to the USDA. “The writing is already on the wall for a slowdown and slight reversal of food prices in 2022,” said Wells Fargo’s Swanson. Future sales of major grains and oilseeds are lower across the board for next year, he said, adding, “Of course, weather always has the final say as to when that actually occurs.”

Historical­ly, meat and animal products have been more volatile than other categories, but Swanson says that meats have led price increases and they are likely to lead the softening and slight reversals.

Where prices may remain high is restaurant­s and other food-away-from-home venues: “Restaurant prices have been rising at higher-than-normal rates. There are a variety of drivers, but rising wage rates and lack of workers are key factors,” said Jayson Lusk, head of the Department of Agricultur­al Economics at Purdue University.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? A man shops in the meat section at a grocery store in Washington, D.C. The Labor Department says meat, poultry, fish and egg prices are up 5.9% over the last year and 14.7% over July 2019, before the pandemic. Food distributo­r Sysco showed food inflation of 10.2% on its most recent quarterly report.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES/TNS A man shops in the meat section at a grocery store in Washington, D.C. The Labor Department says meat, poultry, fish and egg prices are up 5.9% over the last year and 14.7% over July 2019, before the pandemic. Food distributo­r Sysco showed food inflation of 10.2% on its most recent quarterly report.

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