Monday, March 9, 2009

The food crisis never ended

Christopher Delgado, an agricultural policy advisor at the World Bank, recently said of the global food crisis, "The food crisis has not gone away...In fact, it is coming back."

Combing through the media, it would be easy to assume that the food crisis had long ago subsided as demand for imports, commodity prices and economic growth declined. However, risks to food security and the possibility of famine are still very high in many countries. While food commodity prices have fallen from their record highs in 2007, the US Department of Agriculture forecasts that they will remain above historical levels in 2009. The combination of rising food prices, economic contraction, export/price controls and tight trade credit exposes many vulnerable countries, particularly LDCs, to serious risks of famine, poor crop yields and higher prices coinciding with falling income. This doesn't even begin to include the impact on food production by drought, land degradation and other environmental conditions; the UN recently warned that global food production may fall 25% by 2050.

Given the still prevalent risks, it is disconcerting that less is being done to combat the problems directly. Further, certain policy responses to the financial and economic crises, such as looser monetary policy in the developed world, or expropriation in countries like Venezuela, risk stoking the rising food commodity prices. Which brings me to the real danger on the horizon (beyond, of course, the human cost): that the financial, economic and food crises will reinforce each other in a vicious cycle. A food crisis is a likely second-round affect of the financial and economic crises, which in itself breeds political and economic instability, undermining the recovery process and further destabilizing the global economy.

Policy responses to the financial and economic crises are understandably driven by the need for immediate action; to stop the bleeding, so to speak. But what if the very policies necessary to bring us out of this downward spiral only reinforce it in the medium-term?

(photo from snake.eyes' photostream)

1 comment:

jordan said...

Famed commodities investor Jim Rogers predicts "farmers will drive lamboghinis, not traders" (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=agii8KSTAxZo)
in what one would think would be a natural flow of wealth developing in the agricultural commodities markets (the producers making money as opposed to the traders and brokers).