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Paul Krugman: The world food crisis

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  • Paul Krugman: The world food crisis

    http://www.sacbee.com/110/v-print/story/844219.html

    Paul Krugman: The world food crisis
    By Paul Krugman -
    Published 12:00 am PDT Tuesday, April 8, 2008
    These days you hear a lot about the world financial crisis. But there's another world crisis under way – and it's hurting a lot more people. I'm talking about the food crisis.

    Over the past few years the prices of wheat, corn, rice and other basic foodstuffs have doubled or tripled, with much of the increase taking place just in the last few months. High food prices dismay even relatively well-off Americans, but they're truly devastating in poor countries, where food often accounts for more than half a family's spending.

    Food-supplying countries, from Ukraine to Argentina, have been limiting exports in an attempt to protect domestic consumers, leading to angry protests from farmers – and making things even worse in countries that need to import food.

    How did this happen? The answer is a combination of long-term trends, bad luck and bad policy.

    Let's start with the things that aren't anyone's fault.

    First, there's the march of the meat-eating Chinese – that is, the growing number of people in emerging economies who are, for the first time, rich enough to start eating like Westerners. Since it takes about 700 calories' worth of animal feed to produce a 100-calorie piece of beef, this change in diet increases the overall demand for grains.

    Second, there's the price of oil. Modern farming is highly energy-intensive: a lot of BTUs go into producing fertilizer, running tractors and, not least, transporting farm products to consumers. Energy costs have become a major factor driving up agricultural costs.

    High oil prices, by the way, also have a lot to do with the growth of China and other emerging economies. Directly and indirectly, these rising economic powers are competing with the rest of us for scarce resources, including oil and farmland, driving up prices for raw materials of all sorts.

    Third, there has been a run of bad weather in key growing areas. In particular, Australia, normally the world's second-largest wheat exporter, has been suffering from an epic drought.

    OK, I said that these factors behind the food crisis aren't anyone's fault, but that's not quite true. The rise of China and other emerging economies is the main force driving oil prices, but the invasion of Iraq – which proponents promised would lead to cheap oil – has also reduced oil supplies below what they would have been otherwise.

    And bad weather, especially the Australian drought, is probably related to climate change. So politicians and governments that have stood in the way of action on greenhouse gases bear some responsibility for food shortages.

    Where the effects of bad policy are clearest, however, is in the rise of demon ethanol and other biofuels. The subsidized conversion of crops into fuel was supposed to promote energy independence and help limit global warming. But this promise was, as Time magazine bluntly put it, a "scam." This is especially true of corn ethanol: even on optimistic estimates, producing a gallon of ethanol from corn uses most of the energy the gallon contains. But it turns out that even seemingly "good" biofuel policies, like Brazil's use of ethanol from sugar cane, accelerate the pace of climate change by promoting deforestation. And meanwhile, land used to grow biofuel feedstock is land not available to grow food, so subsidies to biofuels are a major factor in the food crisis.

    One more thing: one reason the food crisis has gotten so severe, so fast, is that major players in the grain market grew complacent.

    Governments and private grain dealers used to hold large inventories in normal times, just in case a bad harvest created a sudden shortage. Over the years, however, these precautionary inventories were allowed to shrink, mainly because everyone came to believe that countries suffering crop failures could always import the food they needed.

    This left the world food balance highly vulnerable to a crisis affecting many countries at once.

    What should be done? The most immediate need is more aid to people in distress: the United Nations' World Food Program put out a desperate appeal for more funds.

    We also need a pushback against biofuels, which turn out to have been a terrible mistake.

    But it's not clear how much can be done. Cheap food, like cheap oil, may be a thing of the past.
    In other words, the World is going to be too busy trying to feed themselves as the Iranians get "nuculared" or pulverized into submission.

  • #2
    Re: Paul Krugman: The world food crisis

    See also my thread - The stench of fear in the wheat industry

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    • #3
      Re: Paul Krugman: The world food crisis

      Originally posted by Sapiens View Post
      http://www.sacbee.com/110/v-print/story/844219.html



      In other words, the World is going to be too busy trying to feed themselves as the Iranians get "nuculared" or pulverized into submission.
      So what's the effect on American agrifarm subsidies? With the prices going up for some crops, are the subsidies going down?

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      • #4
        Re: Paul Krugman: The world food crisis

        I wouldn't put too much faith in anything that Paul Krugman writes.

        With respect to potential widespread "food riots": hogwash. The historical price of commodities, over the last century or so, has been falling, very recent inflation notwithstanding. With respect to food commodity prices specifically, the world is currently experiencing a glut in food and a concomitant decrease in food prices. The secular trend indicates the increasing unprofitablility of farming -- in no contemporary developing world country is more than 2% of the population involved in food production.

        Another example: the elimination of famine by the late twentieth century. Even though world population quadrupled between the mid-19th century and the end of the 20th, the number of famine-related deaths is hardly a tenth of those of the 19th century.

        The consequences of truly increasing food prices would be food shortages, meaning: famine, and a tendency for farming to be increasingly profitable.

        The late (and great) economist Julian Simon has the definitive rebuttal to the "we're running out of resources" argument.

        http://www.cato.org/pubs/policy_report/cpr-20n2-1.html
        Last edited by whitetower67; April 13, 2008, 02:00 AM.

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