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Topic: Food Prices Are Soaring Faster Than Inflation and Incomes - page 4. (Read 438 times)

hero member
Activity: 3150
Merit: 937
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Cryptocurrencies being known for innvation and flexibility, could this issue be addressed by rolling out a new crypto token designed to fight global hunger?

Do you think that a new crypto token can protect us from a bad crop season and somehow stop climate change?Global hunger can be reduced by increasing the agriculture production in the third world countries.
The agriculture sector of those countries should be industrialized and mechanized.
There's a lot of potential there,but lots of capital should be invested in Africa,Asia and Latin America and most of the underdeveloped countries aren't very "business-friendly".
I think that it's too late to do anything to stop the climate change.We will have to adapt and learn.


sr. member
Activity: 2506
Merit: 368
I think this covid-19 is a big joke to us because it makes us suffer more from time to time and over a year there's a little progress although they've said there's an effective vaccine already but I still have my doubts about it. We should do something about of the food crisis and one of the best suggestions is to make a garden and plant more vegetables in your backyard or somewhere else around your house.

I think this food prices issue will still continue to grow more and more and it might be too late if we only take action when we finally realized that the cost price is doubled or tripled. If you are on a third world country, you should learn how to survive without the help of the government.

Having a stable job is not enough nowadays because of the minimum wage rate, we should learn to improvise and adapt to the situation in order to survive even without the help of the others.
legendary
Activity: 2730
Merit: 1288
Food Prices Are Soaring Faster Than Inflation and Incomes

Food prices will only go up now. So as everything else. Slowly lock downs in part of the world will end so economy will start going up. Oil, Iron, ... everything will be needed more and prices will go up.
sr. member
Activity: 1988
Merit: 275
It is a very complete report, however it is a rather complicated scenario if the US were to run out of food supplies, in the case of South American countries inflation is exuberant, such is the case of Venezuela, it is not only difficult to get vegetables and fruits Since the prices are very high, there is a large amount of land where the peasants cultivate, also any item is very expensive, I honestly do not know how or how much is spent weekly in a market, but in Venezuela you spend $ 100 and you cannot cover the food basket.

The crisis has generated that people, instead of decoration plants in their homes, plant onions, coriander, among others to avoid making an expense in the near future, given that the US population is very large, it would need to import vegetables and fruits, I hope that this scenario does not arrive, but you have to take precautions.

Actually, that is one way to combat this problem. If you have a small garden or a small land, better tend it with vegetables or plants that will help you in surviving this crisis. Don't look far, evaluate your own situation, and see what you can with your own surroundings. Because waiting for the government subsidy and other help, is not an option right now. You need to act on your own to survive. Don't wait for others' help.  The situation is much better if you can help others.
sr. member
Activity: 1918
Merit: 370
I think thus, doesn't just go with foods and is actually evident in all types of goods that uses materials that require labor. And with the ongoing printing, we can only see this becoming worse and worse for the people. If you do not own bitcoin, you're going to have a big problem once tge USD drops in value.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 1882
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
It is a very complete report, however it is a rather complicated scenario if the US were to run out of food supplies, in the case of South American countries inflation is exuberant, such is the case of Venezuela, it is not only difficult to get vegetables and fruits Since the prices are very high, there is a large amount of land where the peasants cultivate, also any item is very expensive, I honestly do not know how or how much is spent weekly in a market, but in Venezuela you spend $ 100 and you cannot cover the food basket.

The crisis has generated that people, instead of decoration plants in their homes, plant onions, coriander, among others to avoid making an expense in the near future, given that the US population is very large, it would need to import vegetables and fruits, I hope that this scenario does not arrive, but you have to take precautions.
legendary
Activity: 2562
Merit: 1441
Quote
As the Covid-19 pandemic wreaks havoc on economic growth, concerns about hunger and malnutrition are rising around the world

Global food prices are going up, and the timing couldn’t be worse.

In Indonesia, tofu is 30% more expensive than it was in December. In Brazil, the price of local mainstay turtle beans is up 54% compared to last January. In Russia, consumers are paying 61% more for sugar than a year ago.

Emerging markets are feeling the pain of a blistering surge in raw material costs, as commodities from oil to copper and grains are driven higher by expectations for a “roaring 20s” post-pandemic economic recovery as well as ultra-loose monetary policies.

Consumers in the U.S., Canada and Europe won’t be immune either as companies — already under pressure from pandemic-related disruptions and rising transport and packaging costs — run out of ways to absorb the surge.

“People will have to get used to paying more for food,” said Sylvain Charlebois, director of the Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University in Canada. “It’s only going to get worse.”

While never welcome, the coming round of food inflation will be especially tough. As the pandemic wrought havoc on the global economy, it ushered in new concerns about hunger and malnutrition, even in the world’s wealthiest countries. In the U.K., the Trussell Trust gave out a record 2,600 food parcels a day to children in the first six months of the pandemic. In the U.S., the Covid-19 crisis pushed an additional 13.2 million people into food insecurity, a 35% jump from 2018, according to estimates from Feeding America, the nation’s largest hunger-relief organization.

In the U.S., prices rose close to 3% in the year ending Jan. 2, according to NielsenIQ, roughly double the overall rate of inflation. That small jump adds up, particularly for families already near the edge. The poorest Americans already spend 36% of their income on food, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and mass layoffs in lower-wage work like retail and transportation have increased the strain on household budgets.

Meanwhile, the price of staples like grains, sunflower seeds, soybeans and sugar have soared, pushing global food prices to a fresh six-year high in January. They’re not likely to fall any time soon, thanks to a combination of poor weather, increased demand and virus-mangled global supply chains.

Cost Spike
The prices of key food commodities are at multi-year hights

Developed markets tend to be insulated from short-term price spikes, because food is more processed and the food chain is more elaborate. In the process of turning a bushel of corn into a bag of Tostitos, food companies have a lot of room to absorb incremental costs, said David Ubilava, a senior lecturer at the University of Sydney who specializes in agricultural economics. But when costs stay high for a sustained period of time, companies start thinking about how to pass them on.

“We are experiencing inflation right now as is everybody else," Conagra Brands Inc. Chief Executive Officer Sean Connolly said in an interview. Costs are up for oils, pork and eggs, plus packaging materials like cardboard and steel. The company, parent to more than 70 brands including Birds Eye, Chef Boyardee, and Udi’s Gluten-Free, says raising prices is one of the levers it could pull this year to counter rising costs.

General Mills, the maker of Cheerios, Yoplait and and Blue Buffalo pet food, is also looking at price increases, said Jon Nudi, who leads the North American retail division, at least “in the areas we see significant inflation.” Dave Ciesinski, Chief Executive Officer of Lancaster Colony Corp., which makes the Marzetti brand and others, said they anticipate a sustained period of rising costs. The company is going to have to figure out how to “justifiably or appropriately pass on these costs,” he told analysts in an earnings call.

Even the cost of white label goods — also known as house brands — is likely to go up, notably in the second half of the year, said Steven Oakland, CEO of Treehouse Foods, which makes products for grocery stores to sell under their own brand names. “We're working very closely to decide what can we mitigate,” he said. “What do we need to pass on? What's the right movement with the consumer?”

Inflation on the Mind
Inflation and how to price for it is increasingly a hot topic in the food industry

The increases might not be immediately obvious to shoppers. Instead of raising the sticker price, retailers may cut back on multi-buy deals or special promotions. Last year, the number of grocery items sold on promotion in the U.S. dropped by 20 percentage points, according to NielsenIQ data, partly because pandemic-driven logistical challenges squeezed supply.

There may also be another round of so-called shrinkflation, where the price stays the same but the product size shrinks. That’s long been a popular tactic in the U.K., where a decade long supermarket price war has kept prices low.

A study by the Office for National Statistics found between Jan. 2012 and June 2017 — a period when food companies faced rising costs, plus a weakening pound — as many as 2,529 products were made smaller, more than four times the number that increased in size. British shoppers took special exception to the shrinking of Mars’ Maltesers by 15% and Birds Eye dropping from 12 to 10 fish fingers in a packet.

“I expect it to be a continued feature of the way that food is sold in the U.K. going forward,” Richard Lim, CEO of consultancy Retail Economics said. “I don’t think we’ll see a stop to this.”

Right now, food prices in the U.K. are flat or declining but Liliana Danila, economist at the British Retail Consortium, says she expects that to change, and it could come as a bit of a shock. A decade-long supermarket price war has accustomed British consumers to the cheapest prices in Europe. “They are maybe a bit more likely to be less prepared than consumers in other places,” Danila said.

Adding to the pressure in the U.K. is the impact of Brexit, which is adding complications and delays to previously frictionless trade. The U.K.’s Food and Drink Federation estimates that red tape and new border checks could add 3 billion pounds ($4.1 billion) in costs per year for food importers.

The food industry in North America has its own expensive challenges. In particular, a shortage of both shipping containers and truck drivers has made it more costly to transport food, and the rising price of oil has raised packaging costs.

In emerging markets, where people typically eat food closer to its natural state and prices change quickly, families are having to confront the issue right now.

Read More: The Five Hotspots Where Food Prices Are Getting People Worried

“I got smaller piece of tempeh and tofu now, with the same price as last week,” said Rahayu, who goes by one name as many in Indonesia do, a 64-year-old grandmother in West Java province, noting that in recent weeks, the price of chili had more than doubled to 70,000 rupiah ($4.97) per kilogram. “I’m going to need to use less.”

With these pressures building, Russia and Argentina have put price curbs on certain staples and slapped tariffs on exports in an attempt to contain domestic food prices.

In some richer countries, governments are focusing more on self-sufficiency than price controls. France is planning to boost its output of high-protein crops to cut reliance on soybean imports, while Singapore recently became the first country to approve sales of lab-created meat as it pushes to boost its domestic food capacity.

Others are looking to broad stimulus measures. Testifying before the U.S. House Financial Services Committee last week, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell pointed to food insecurity as one example of how the pandemic has strained poorer communities, and as another impetus to get the economy moving again.

“I think we’ve all been struck — how could you not be struck — by the uptake in the food area,” Powell said. “It’s a sign that support is needed and we really need to get the economy recovered as soon as possible.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-03-01/inflation-2021-malnutrition-and-hunger-fears-rise-as-food-prices-soar-globally


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There could be an elevated need for access to affordable food in the near future.

My US state could last a maximum of 3 days without food supplies. As with most of the developed western world -- we're reliant upon a constant stream of inbound container ships to keep everyone fed.

Climate change, flooding, drought and water scarcity could someday converge to produce bad crop seasons which could drive up the cost of food. As someone who read more than their fair share of news, I can say with certainty there are horror stories coming out of places like north korea and russia illustrating how circumstances can deteriorate significantly after a bad crop season.

Cryptocurrencies being known for innvation and flexibility, could this issue be addressed by rolling out a new crypto token designed to fight global hunger?

One possible scenario for this is creating educational lectures on how to grow and produce food with a quiz at the end. Rewarding participants with crypto coins for answering questions correctly. A big part of humanitarian efforts in 3rd world nations is education on how to grow crops. Farming competitions could be held and rewarded via token. Its the internet era ideas like these are a dime a dozen.
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