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  • Bread price rises again

    Bread price rises again
    published: Sunday | January 6, 2008


    Nagra Plunkett, Assignment Coordinator
    WESTERN BUREAU:
    Consumers are to face another steep increase in the cost of baked products tomorrow as a result of a further 22 per cent addition to the cost of bakery flour and related goods.
    "It simply means that consumers can expect an immediate increase in the cost of baked products," president of the Bakers' Asso-ciation of [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]Jamaica[/COLOR][/COLOR], Gerry Chambers, told The Sunday Gleaner. "There was a 20 per cent increase in September and since then, the price of sugar went up, so that only compounds the situation."
    In a letter sent to Chambers on Friday, Derrick Nembhard, managing director of Jamaica Flour Mills (JFM), stated that the company would be absorbing the increases as they related to counter flour and counter flour-related products, but would pass on the higher cost as it relates to bakery flour.
    Further increases?
    "The price of grain in general continues to increase and in particular, wheat and corn prices. These increases have been further amplified by increases in the world price of oil coupled with the slide in our local currency," the correspondence also read.
    JFM is the island's single flour mill and its American parent company is Archer Daniel Midlands Company. Nembhard also disclosed that "further increases could be a real possibility" as reports from JFM's grain division in the United States are indicating that the prices of both types of wheat used in the manufacture of bakery and counter flours continue to rise.
    Chambers, operator of Hilton's Bakery in [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]Montego [COLOR=orange! important]Bay[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR], St. James, noted that the price increase for flour is also expected to affect animal feed and [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]poultry[/COLOR][/COLOR]. The Sunday Gleaner also understands that the volatility of the market has not allowed local bakers to stockpile supplies. The instability in prices for wheat has also been linked to the demand for corn as feedstock for fuel-grade ethanol production, as farmers in the United States shift their fields from wheat to corn.
    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
    Che Guevara.

  • #2
    time we start farming again. The American farmers them making a killing of corn. Why we continue to import?
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

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    • #3
      22%!? wow... not 5 or 10 % but 22%... that seems harsh...
      'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

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      • #4
        time to start boiling bananas again in the morning and cook callalloo
        Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
        Che Guevara.

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        • #5
          DE good life!!!!


          Blessed

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          • #6
            A hope dem nuh start importing Banana too or yu goose cook.
            • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

            Comment


            • #7
              the captain ago BATHE!!!

              Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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