http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3002&Itemid=226

Is the Food Crisis Real?

Written by John Berthelsen    
Monday, 21 February 2011 O
r is it another bout of government panic and market manipulation? 

See related stories: 
The Challenges China Faces, 23December 2010
The Wellsprings of the 2007-2008 Food Crisis, 19 November 2010
Wheat Prices No Reason for Panic, 15 September 2010 
Is Another Food Crisis Coming? Aug. 12 2010

What is going on with global food prices? Last week the World Bank, in its Food 
Price Watch, warned that they have hit dangerous levels that could contribute 
to "macro vulnerabilities" including political instability. 

Some 44 million people in the developing world, where typically half of family 
budgets go into food purchases, have been pushed into extreme poverty, 
according to the World Bank's report. As governments raise interest rates in 
the effort to keep food price inflation in check, they face the problem of 
choking off economic growth in the wider economy at a time when the world and 
the region are still recovering from the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

But how much of this is real and how much is panic and market manipulation? Two 
weeks ago, for instance, Indonesia announced it would increase its stockpiles 
to 2 million tonnes, with Hatta Rajasa, the Coordinating Minister for the 
Economy, telling reporters that because the rest of the world is increasing its 
stocks, Indonesia must as well. That calls up images of 2007, when 
rice-exporting governments locked up their warehouses to the outside world and 
drove rice prices from US$300 per tonne to US$1,100 in six months before prices 
collapsed back to about US$550 per tonne when the world came to the realization 
that there was no rice crisis at all.

There are signs that it might be happening again. Wheat prices are up 74 
percent over the last year, corn up 92 percent. 

At the G20 meeting of finance ministers and central bankers on Feb. 18 and 19, 
the participants "discussed concerns about consequences of potential excessive 
commodity price volatility and asked our deputies to work with international 
organizations and to report back to us on the underlying drivers and the 
challenges posed by these trends for both consumers and producers and consider 
possible actions," according to the official communiqué issued by the body at 
the close of the session.

Whether that is enough to keep governments in line is a good question. But it 
appears that surveys by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United 
Nations and other organizations, there is enough food around. In many countries 
in Africa, the World Bank pointed out in its food price watch, maize, sorghum, 
millet and cassava have all enjoyed good harvests, allowing domestic 
substitution away from imported wheat and rice in some of the most vulnerable 
countries. Global corn yields are up 5.1 percent over the last year

The weather has taken much of the blame for the psychological effect, with 
television showing pictures of floods in Australia and Pakistan, fires in 
Russia and drought in China and other problems. Floods and wet weather have 
driven the price of red chilies in Indonesia to US$15 per kilogram from 
US$2.2/kg, a jump of 600 percent, causing problems for politicians amid citizen 
outrage. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono urged citizens to grow their own in 
their gardens. But in fact, while the images are spectacular and some of the 
blame has to go to extremes caused by climate change, the weather hasn't had 
that much effect on various crops. 

The current La Nina, the flip side of the El Nino coin which causes wet weather 
in ENSO, as the El Nino Southern Oscillation is known, is almost exactly in the 
middle range of the last 13 versions of the weather phenomenon, with six with 
lower temperature peaks and six with higher ones. It only became a 
fully-fledged La Nina in December. It is believed to have turned mild in 
January and is expected to end in May or June, according to the Australian 
Bureau of Meteorology. However, it is undeniable that Indonesia's palm oil 
production has been hit by bad weather.

The world wheat crop, which has drawn the biggest concern because of the 
Russian, Australian and Pakistani weather situations, actually hasn't been hurt 
that badly, according to data supplied by a Shanghai-based research firm that 
specializes in commodities. Australia's crop is expected to come in at 24.4 
million tonnes, with 10 million tonnes downgraded to feed quality. Argentina's 
crop is expected to exceed forecasts. While Kazakhstan's crop has been affected 
by drought, exports could still exceed predictions because the country has 3.5 
million tonnes in storage. China's crop has undoubtedly suffered from drought 
in key wheat-producing states as Pakistan's has suffered from floods. 

Rice provides an interesting economic window to the problem. Very little rice 
is traded on international markets, so what happens domestically provides a 
clear yardstick. In Vietnam, one of the world's biggest rice exporters, the 
price rose by 46 percent between June and December according to the World Bank. 
But it is primarily because of the 7 percent depreciation of the Vietnamese 
dong, which has fueled inflation. International exporters have expected demand 
to rise, driving up futures prices and causing the government to raise the 
minimum export price. 

That plays out against the fact that both Thailand and Vietnam have enjoyed 
good harvests and, the World Bank says, "the fundamentals in the supply 
situation in the rice market remain strong." 

There are several policy implications in the recent round of price rises, the 
World Bank says. "There are certain key commodity mar kets, such as rice, where 
informational uncertainty and panic buying may keep prices from falling to the 
levels expected by the good harvests."

Thus it could indeed be 2007 all over again.


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