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  • Food prices rising across the world

    Food prices rising across the world



    MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP) -- If you're seeing your grocery bill go up, you're not alone.
    Protesters share a loaf of bread in Cairo, Egypt, while demonstrating against high food prices.




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    var CNN_ArticleChanger = new CNN_imageChanger('cnnImgChngr','/2008/WORLD/americas/03/24/food.ap/imgChng/p1-0.init.exclude.html',2,1);//CNN.imageChanger.load('cnnImgChngr','imgChng/p1-0.exclude.html');From subsistence farmers eating rice in Ecuador to gourmets feasting on escargot in France, consumers worldwide face rising food prices in what analysts call a perfect storm of conditions. Freak weather is a factor. But so are dramatic changes in the global economy, including higher oil prices, lower food reserves and growing consumer demand in China and India.
    The world's poorest nations still harbor the greatest hunger risk. Clashes over bread in Egypt killed at least two people last week, and similar food riots broke out in Burkina Faso and Cameroon this month.
    But food protests now crop up even in Italy. And while the price of spaghetti has doubled in Haiti, the cost of miso is packing a hit in Japan.
    "It's not likely that prices will go back to as low as we're used to," said Abdolreza Abbassian, economist and secretary of the Intergovernmental Group for Grains for the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. "Currently if you're in Haiti, unless the government is subsidizing consumers, consumers have no choice but to cut consumption. It's a very brutal scenario, but that's what it is."
    No one knows that better than Eugene Thermilon, 30, a Haitian day laborer who can no longer afford pasta to feed his wife and four children since the price nearly doubled to $0.57 a bag. Their only meal on a recent day was two cans of corn grits.
    "Their stomachs were not even full," Thermilon said, walking toward his pink concrete house on the precipice of a garbage-filled ravine. By noon the next day, he still had nothing to feed them for dinner.
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    Their hunger has had a ripple effect. Haitian food vendor Fabiola Duran Estime, 31, has lost so many customers like Thermilon that she had to pull her daughter, Fyva, out of kindergarten because she can't afford the $20 monthly tuition.
    Fyva was just beginning to read.
    In the long term, prices are expected to stabilize. Farmers will grow more grain for both fuel and food and eventually bring prices down. Already this is happening with wheat, with more crops to be planted in the U.S., Canada and Europe in the coming year.
    However, consumers still face at least 10 years of more expensive food, according to preliminary FAO projections.
    Among the driving forces are petroleum prices, which increase the cost of everything from fertilizers to transport to food processing. Rising demand for meat and dairy in rapidly developing countries such as China and India is sending up the cost of grain, used for cattle feed, as is the demand for raw materials to make biofuels.
    What's rare is that the spikes are hitting all major foods in most countries at once. Food prices rose 4 percent in the U.S. last year, the highest rise since 1990, and are expected to climb as much again this year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
    As of December, 37 countries faced food crises, and 20 had imposed some sort of food-price controls.
    For many, it's a disaster. The U.N.'s World Food Program says it's facing a $500 million shortfall in funding this year to feed 89 million needy people. On Monday, it appealed to donor countries to step up contributions, saying its efforts otherwise have to be scaled back.
    In Egypt, where bread is up 35 percent and cooking oil 26 percent, the government recently proposed ending food subsidies and replacing them with cash payouts to the needy. But the plan was put on hold after it sparked public uproar.
    "A revolution of the hungry is in the offing," said Mohammed el-Askalani of Citizens Against the High Cost of Living, a protest group established to lobby against ending the subsidies.
    In China, the price hikes are both a burden and a boon.
    Per capita meat consumption has increased 150 percent since 1980, so Zhou Jian decided six months ago to switch from selling auto parts to pork. The price of pork has jumped 58 percent in the past year, yet every morning housewives and domestics still crowd his Shanghai shop, and more customers order choice cuts.
    The 26-year-old now earns $4,200 a month, two to three times what he made selling car parts. And it's not just pork. Beef is becoming a weekly indulgence.
    "The Chinese middle class is starting to change the traditional thought process of beef as a luxury," said Kevin Timberlake, who manages the U.S.-based Western Cattle Company feedlot in China's Inner Mongolia.
    At the same time, increased cost of food staples in China threatens to wreak havoc. Beijing has been selling grain from its reserves to hold down prices, said Jing Ulrich, chairwoman of China equities for JP Morgan.
    "But this is not really solving the root cause of the problem," Ulrich said. "The cause of the problem is a supply-demand imbalance. Demand is very strong. Supply is constrained. It is as simple as that."
    Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao says fighting inflation from shortages of key foods is a top economic priority. Inflation reached 7.1 percent in January, the highest in 11 years, led by an 18.2 percent jump in food prices.
    Meanwhile, record oil prices have boosted the cost of fertilizer and freight for bulk commodities -- up 80 percent in 2007 over 2006. The oil spike has also turned up the pressure for countries to switch to biofuels, which the FAO says will drive up the cost of corn, sugar and soybeans "for many more years to come."
    In Japan, the ethanol boom is hitting the country in mayonnaise and miso, two important culinary ingredients, as biofuels production pushes up the price of cooking oil and soybeans.
    A two-pound bottle of mayonnaise his risen about 10 percent in two months to as much as 330 yen (nearly $3), said Daishi Inoue, a cook at a Chinese restaurant.
    "It's not hurting us much now," he said. "But if prices keep going up, we have no choice but to raise our prices."
    Miso Bank, a restaurant in Tokyo's glitzy Ginza district, specializes in food cooked with miso, or soybean paste.
    "We expect prices to go up in April all at once," said Miso Bank manager Koichi Oritani. "The hikes would affect our menu. So we plan to order miso in bulk and make changes to the menu."
    Italians are feeling the pinch in pasta, with consumer groups staging a one-day strike in September against a food deeply intertwined with national identity. Italians eat an estimated 60 pounds of pasta per capita a year.
    The protest was symbolic because Italians typically stock up on pasta, buying multiple packages at a time. But in the next two months pasta consumption dropped 5 percent, said farm lobbyist Rolando Manfredini.
    "The situation has gotten even worse," he said.
    In decades past, farm subsidies and support programs allowed major grain exporting countries to hold large surpluses, which could be tapped during food shortages to keep prices down. But new trade policies have made agricultural production much more responsive to market demands -- putting global food reserves at their lowest in a quarter century.
    Without reserves, bad weather and poor harvests have a bigger impact on prices.
    "The market is extremely nervous. With the slightest news about bad weather, the market reacts," said economist Abbassian.
    That means that a drought in Australia and flooding in Argentina, two of the world's largest suppliers of industrial milk and butter, sent the price of butter in France soaring 37 percent from 2006 to 2007.
    Forty percent of escargot, the snail dish, is butter.
    "You can do the calculation yourself," said Romain Chapron, president of Croque Bourgogne, which supplies escargot. "It had a considerable effect. It forced people in our profession to tighten their belts to the maximum."
    The same climate crises sparked a 21 percent rise in the cost of milk, which with butter makes another famous French food item -- the croissant. Panavi, a pastry and bread supplier, has raised retail prices of croissants and pain au chocolat by 6 to 15 percent.
    Already, there's a lot of suspicion among consumers.
    "They don't understand why prices have gone up like this," said Nicole Watelet, general secretary at the Federation of French Bakeries and Pastry Enterprises. "They think that someone is profiting from this. But it's not us. We're paying." Food costs worldwide spiked 23 percent from 2006 to 2007, according to the FAO. Grains went up 42 percent, oils 50 percent and dairy 80 percent.
    Economists say that for the short term, government bailouts will have to be part of the answer to keep unrest at a minimum. In recent weeks, rising food prices sparked riots in the West African nations of Burkina Faso, where mobs torched buildings, and Cameroon, where at least four people died.
    But attempts to control prices in one country often have dire effects elsewhere. China's restrictions on wheat flour exports resulted in a price spike in Indonesia this year, according to the FAO. Ukraine and Russia imposed export restrictions on wheat, causing tight supplies and higher prices for importing countries. Partly because of the cost of imported wheat, Peru's military has begun eating bread made from potato flour, a native crop.
    "We need a response on a large scale, either the regional or international level," said Brian Halweil of the environmental research organization Worldwatch Institute. "All countries are tied enough to the world food markets that this is a global crisis."
    Poorer countries can speed up the adjustment by investing in agriculture, experts say. If they do, farmers can turn high prices into an engine for growth.
    But in countries like Burkina Faso, the crisis is immediate.
    Days after the riots, Pascaline OuÄedraogo wandered the market in the capital, Ouagadougou, looking to buy meat and vegetables. She said a good meal cost 1,000 francs (about $2.35) not long ago. Now she needs twice that.
    "The more prices go up, the less there is to meet their needs," she said of her three children, all in secondary school. "You wonder if it's the government or the businesses that are behind the price hikes."
    IrÇene Belem, a 25-year-old with twins, struggles to buy milk, which has gone up 57 percent in recent weeks.
    "We knew we were poor before," she said, "but now it's worse than poverty."E-mail to a friend
    Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or
    • 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.

  • #2
    "Bring you lass and come"

    Calling all Jamaican farmer and technocrats. It is time to produce and take advantage of higher prices. For far too long they have been dumping overseas inferior food on Ja. This is a call to arms for all a the farmer man dem, stop complaining about price of imported goods.

    We need Ackee farm, breadfruit farm, more fish farms, mango farms, be more productive in producing banana and sugar. plant a little callaloo, lettice, Yam is a bout 1.99 a lb in US.

    It would be very pleasing to me to see Ja can feed itself and there is no reason we can't because unlike most other places things nuh need fertiliser fi grow.
    • 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


    • #3
      Sass - some people nuh plant! Most Portlanders just wake up and see a breadfruit, ackee, sweet sop etc. tree growing, and it's not transplanted, it stay right there and grow.

      I kid you not, my mother said she never realized that people actually planted and tended those crops until she went to Manchester to live. For as a child living in Portland, she never saw anyone planting them. Go figure
      Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
      - Langston Hughes

      Comment


      • #4
        See Mosiah Trini fren dem boosting dem food production

        (dem mekking certain that Baron Marshall have food fi eat when him get there)

        Trinidad creating large farms to boost food production

        AP
        Tuesday, March 25, 2008


        PORT-AU-PRINCE, Trinidad (AP) - To offset food price hikes of more than 25 per cent since 2005, this Caribbean nation plans to convert up to 20,000 acres (8,090 hectares) of state-owned land into large farms, and they're looking to Cuba for expertise in ramping up agricultural production.

        The farms will be created in Tucker Valley, a fertile region where a US naval base operated during World War II, and sold to qualified buyers. Experts from Cuba are expected to arrive next month to teach farmers how to mass-produce fruits and vegetables for local consumption, Trinidad Agriculture Minister Arnold Piggott said.

        Small-scale farmers are concerned that once the large farms are created, their parcels - which they traditionally lease from the government for 30 years - will be seized for construction of homes and businesses. Some such cases have been reported recently, said Dhano Sookoo, president of the island's agricultural society, which represents 17,000 farmers.

        Piggott denied that land seizures are being contemplated, but acknowledged that the government needs to keep building 10,000 houses a year to meet the population's needs. "It may very well be that some traditional agricultural lands, which may now be lying waste, may be allocated for housing," Piggott said.
        Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
        - Langston Hughes

        Comment


        • #5
          mi know, it funny nuh rhatid. I see people inna America a plant little tomato and callaloo and the amount a fertilizer them a fi use to rhatid.

          As a little youth we jus use to till the soil and put down seed and all we did was water it and get some food. Ah bwoy a time we state to produce and stop depend pon god fi feed we.
          • 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


          • #6
            MdmeX and Sass I was in your part of the island for a few days last month, first time in Portland for about 10 years. Bwoy what a place have potential but it hardly look any different from I remember it last time i was there.

            While I was eating some jerk and roast breadfruit, and a starapple for desert (can't tell how long since I had a starapple) I said to myself if all hell break loose in the world, this is where I want to go chill out. Rain fell every day just like i remember it, and like you say so much fruit trees just grow naturally.

            I was a little disapointed in Boston but I went there on a Monday which is probably the worst day to go. A few local people tell me that Buff Bay have better jerk than Boston these days.

            The car ride from Ochi took forever due to the construction, but it is progress so it never bother me too much. I guess I wasn't paying attention to the news, but I didn't realise that the new airstrip them talking bout wasn't going to be at the old St Margrets Bay location. Is somewhere is St Thomas?
            "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

            Comment


            • #7
              I was in Port Antonio over the weekend. Yes, the place still have much potential, but we have been talking about this potential since how long now? Why can't something just happen!?!

              It was sunny when I was there but the road was still in a bad state. Dem really tek people fi granted. I had driven thru Junction from Kingston and wanted to go back around thru Boston/Manchioneal just to avoid the bad roads, but I heard that side was worse!

              Had lunch at Anna Banana. Great! That fish was huge!


              BLACK LIVES MATTER

              Comment


              • #8
                Mo you see why mi have fi lick out so? It is crying shame but maybe a because the people them nuh shoot and commit crimes like certain places why them get absolutely no attention. Mi wonder how people vechile drive through Junction and a daily basis cause that will mash up even a Hummer or Land Rover to rhatid.
                • 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


                • #9
                  Ha Islandman & Mosiah,

                  Yes Portie have nuff potential (hearing that for too damn long). The main road from Kng. via St. Thomas is horrible, and the people dem drive like "lightning". I found that some roads in the interior were better maintained than the main road itself.

                  The only change I noticed in my '06 visit was that the town is so congested, with a shopping mall on almost every korner, which only lends to more congestion. I wish they would tear down that great white elephant, the Clock Tower, which never kept the correct time from it was erected over 25 years ago.

                  I believe the Councillor at the time, must have pocketed big from that project, as with all the argument put forth AGAINST it, he was adamant. I hear the bottom of the tower, is being used as a storage for jelly coconuts.

                  But they'd better start farming, for with all the development that Lee Chin have up his sleeve, visitors will need food to eat.
                  Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                  - Langston Hughes

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Islandman,

                    Will the new airstrip be between the St. Thomas and Portland border? If so, that would be fantastic. For one, folks in that locale relied heavily on banana and coconut farming (dying industry), and employment through the sugar estate @ Duckenfield.

                    If it means that the eyesore of those delapidated wooden structures at Golden Grove can be demolished, and those people get better housing to live in, that will be great.
                    Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                    - Langston Hughes

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      yes mi hear say the Airport is on St.Thomas border. I hope them build it.

                      As Mo said it has been too long them talking and talking, something needs to be done. I can tell you that my little spot is secured right pon the border of Portland and St.Mary.

                      Yeah man a not mi go a town, mi see people a ingraph plant and a do all kinda stuff. When you deh a Portland you just pray and get a ackee tree, breadfruit tree, Mango tree,Nesberry tree, or apple tree inna you yard.

                      Yeah Buff Bay a lick the Jerk yah now. bwoy a two years ago mi go a yard and mi can't wait fi land again.
                      • 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


                      • #12
                        I want Portie to remain as it is. It captures
                        the raw beauty of Ja since the days of Columbus. Well yes good roads and water but that's about it. Wuss like how mi ah marry ah portie

                        unnuh leff di parish alone. Dem have obout 12 more fi develop, unnuh gwaan go devlop dem.

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