Soaring cost of food, blame the speculators

Not many economists called the commodity and food market boom we have seen so far this year.      Oil was supposed to have been falling by now – instead it set yet another all-time high on Friday.

As for the rising price of food, sure, there were hints, but no one predicted the extreme rises we have been seeing.

It all leaves one important question.  Are we seeing a permanent change?  Is oil up there in price for good simply because in the new world order demand for that black oozy stuff is too high for the earth’s limited resources?

Is food so dear at the moment because two permanent forces are working?    First force: the world’s population, which is now 6.6 billion – and on course for 9 billion by the middle of this century.  Second force, rising living standards – as China and India develop, demand for meat rises and, as you know, meat requires more land than crops that we eat directly, such as rice or wheat.

Or is it just temporary?

There were a string of reports in the press over the weekend blaming rising food on speculators.

Speculators were moving into food, went the argument, because they weren’t sure where else to put their money.      The Observer, for example quoted Jim O’Neil, chief economist at Goldman Sachs as saying rising demand from the BRIC countries was not enough to explain all of the price surge.

It is quite convenient to blame speculators, of course.  It means economists can say we were right not to call the rise, we could not have foreseen irrational buying, and it is all just temporary

It also means that speculators could get the blame for it all.    Riots in the streets, social unrest, and it is all down to the speculators.

But it mustn’t be forgotten speculators do base their decisions on what the fundamentals are saying. If they believe price is too high, they are hardly likely to go on pushing it up.

The truth is, the real failure has been the with the economists – speculators and hedge funds the scapegoat.

Now, the more-optimistic economists are saying markets will respond to the food shortage by leading to an increase in the amount of land being used for agriculture.  

Agriculture will become more efficient too. 

It’s the natural way of things.  When supply exceeds demand, we cut back on production.  We cut back on investment.  Then, all of a sudden, it flips.  Demand is greater than supply and we invest more, we make the most of our existing resources.

That argument is fine when applied to ball bearings, even to computer chips.     But it is not really acceptable when applied to food. 

It seems that failure to spot the current food crisis was a failure of massive proportions.

At the moment we are all busy blaming banks for their over-exuberance in the supply of credit. But, in reality, a far bigger failure relates to the way the food crisis was not spotted in advance.   As a result, people are going short of food, and all kinds of nasty social unrest could follow.

If there is a lesson to this, it is this. We just can’t afford to wait until crisis is staring us in the face before we act.  We have to learn to read the signs. 

Bear that in mind when we are told to stop fretting about global warming.

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The other crisis: soaring food prices and seven lost years

Wheat prices are up 181 per cent in three years.  Rice has risen by 70 per cent over the last year, and it is hurting.  Sure, it is hurting in the developed world, where rising food prices are creating inflationary pressures; it is hurting in Italy, which saw a one-day pasta strike last year; but in other parts of the world, it is really hurting.

According to the World Bank, in some countries the poor spend as much as 75 per cent of their income on food.  And, as World Bank President Robert Zoellick said last week, “In Bangladesh a two-kilogramme bag of rice…now consumes about half the daily income of a poor family.”

“This is not just about meals foregone today or about increasing social unrest,” said Mr Zoellick. “This is about lost learning potential for children and adults in the future, stunted intellectual and physical growth. Even more, we estimate that the effect of this food crisis on poverty reduction worldwide is in the order of seven lost years. So we need to address this not just as an immediate emergency but also in the medium term for development!”

To take a specific example, the World Bank says that in the case of Yemen, estimates show that the doubling of wheat prices over the last year could reverse all gains in poverty reduction achieved between 1998 and 2005.

So what can be done about it?

For one thing, the World Bank wants to see the international community make up the $500 million food gap, recently identified by the UN’s World Food Programme, to meet emergency needs. 

Zoellick has proposed that sovereign wealth funds around the world allocate US$30 billion – one per cent of their US$3 trillion assets – to investments for African “growth, development, and opportunity.”

But the World Bank itself is doubling agricultural lending to sub-Saharan Africa over the next year to US$800 million to substantially increase crop productivity.

The crisis is being made more serious because some exporting countries are introducing export bans, which lead to price spikes in importing countries.  The World Bank also said high levels of trade tariffs and subsidies in the developed world are distorting markets.

Critics of globalisation will of course see all this as yet another example of the evils of growing world trade.    But the truth is that it is anti trade measures, subsidies in the west and export bans that have really hit the markets so hard.    The problem surely is not that globalisation is a bad thing, it is that too many developed countries are only half-heartedly taking to it.

Calls for tariffs and subsidies in the US, for example, probably pose the single-biggest threat to the global economy today.

A part of the problem is that eating meat is not very efficient.  It takes up far more energy to grow food to feed livestock which we then eat, than it does to grow food we eat directly.      As India and China develop, demand for meat is growing.

This poses an interesting and somewhat alarming question.

Back in 1798 , the economist Thomas Malthus published one of the most important and controversial, and possibly the most-debated, theories in the history of economic thought.   He argued that any technological advances and the benefits they bring lead to a rise in population, so that that the benefits from that advance are cancelled out by the rising population. In other words, the human race can expect to always exist at subsistence levels.

His theories were later dismissed by what was seen as empirical evidence which disproved his argument.   In Britain during the Industrial Revolution, absolute poverty levels fell, while the population rose.    It appears that as family wealth rises, the birth rate starts to fall.  Improving medical and nutritional standards mean infant deaths are lower, and as a result a lower birth rate is required.   In the past, large families were seen as providing a pension to parents.  As wealth and health improved, the families didn’t need so many children.  Finally, emancipation of women has led to lower birth rates.

Malthus has been accused of giving economics a bad name, of earning it the nickname of the dismal science, but it does seem he may have a point after all.

It is all very well dismissing his theory because for a couple of centuries a small percentage of the world enjoyed rapid rises in per capita wealth, but it has never been proven that the world can cope with true mass industrialisation.   

It may also seem as if the world is in something of a race.    Eventually, the rate of population growth will slow in the developing world – the question is, can food output rise to sufficient levels while the population is still rising?

Now that over a billion people are joining the developed world, it is becoming debatable whether there are indeed enough natural resources to supply all the food and energy the world needs.   It is this push on supply that is the true reason why food and oil have been rising so high in price.

But, talking about increasing investment to aid crop productivity, the World Bank has hit the nail right on the head.    What the world needs now is greater agricultural productivity, and more energy – but both have to be produced in more-sustainable ways.

This is why the media hysteria related to GM crops is potentially very damaging.    GM food is potentially the saviour of the worldwide food crisis.  And we need a reasoned debate based on facts.

Similar arguments apply to sustainable energy, such as solar and wind power.

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Wheat hits new all time high

And while the debate roars on whether recent rises in inflation are one-offs or a sign of changing times, food prices soar some more.

Down under there’s a shortage of rain; in Argentina it was too cold for farmers’ liking. In Germany it was chucking it down with rain throughout the July harvest, we could go on. It appears that in 2007, the world had the wrong type of weather.

At the same time, the increasing use of bio-fuels, in which crops that could otherwise have been used for food are being used as an alternative to oil, has helped push up demand.

It all proved too much, and this week the price of wheat on the futures market has soared - hitting $10 a bushel - that’s the highest level ever.

It won’t mean that the food we eat will immediately soar, the big food suppliers, people like Kelloggs, for example, agree long-supply contracts, fixing prices for a while. But these contracts will end. So you see, it’s a little like fixed rate mortgages.

So, it really seems to hinge on whether food prices stay up - if they do, then the prices we pay will rise too.

The UN is worried about it. Its Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) says, “Currently 37 countries worldwide are facing food crises due to conflict and disasters. In addition, food security is being adversely affected by unprecedented price hikes for basic food, driven by historically low food stocks, droughts and floods linked to climate change, high oil prices and growing demand for bio-fuels. High international cereal prices have already sparked food riots in several countries.”

FAO said, “Some countries like Malawi have proven that it is possible to boost local food production through the provision of vouchers for farm inputs”.

“The Malawi programme, helped by good rains, has over the last two years produced spectacular results whereby maize production in 2006/07 was one million metric tonnes higher than national maize requirements. The value of the extra production was double that of the investment provided. Many small-scale farmers have benefited and have increased production for their own consumption. The Malawi success could be replicated by other countries facing a very difficult food production environment.”

And it called for action to help other poor counties saying, “Urgent and new steps are needed to prevent the negative impacts of rising food prices from further escalating, and to quickly boost crop production in the most affected countries.”

But returning to the west, does this mean inflation will set in?

Remember, inflation is a sustained rise in prices. So food will need to keep going up, before it be classified as inflationary. Capital Economics also says that “the drivers of the recent surge in food prices have been temporary rather than permanent, including poor harvests and an upsurge in animal diseases. Speculative pressures have also helped to inflate agricultural commodity prices: the recent falls in copper prices show how quickly these pressures can unwind.”

But we will leave you with one worry. If the succession of bad harvests is just bad luck, then that’s good, because luck will change. But if it’s down to climate change, then that is altogether much more serious.

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