No mention of problems in North America and Europe. They are talking about the world, aren't they?
Food
prices are skyrocketing, and economists are worried
Weather
shocks, higher oil prices and a sharp depreciation in the US dollar
could make food expensive, warn experts.
by
Michael S. Arnold and Anirban Nag • Bloomberg
28
November, 2019
Food
prices are climbing fast in the world's biggest emerging markets,
posing a possible inflation threat after months of dormant pressures.
Asia's
two largest developing economies face a price surge for staple
products -- pork in China and onions in India -- that are central to
consumers' diets. In Turkey and Nigeria, supply problems are driving
up costs, while United Nations data show global food prices rose at
the fastest pace in October in more than two years.
While
the spike is painful for poorer consumers, it hasn't reached a level
to convince central banks to pull the brake on policy easing, as they
remain focused on boosting economic growth amid a global slowdown.
Average inflation across emerging markets is still at an all-time
low, according to a Bloomberg gauge of consumer price indexes.
"We
think it's likely they would look through food inflation that is
concentrated on a handful of products and driven by idiosyncratic
factors," said Taimur Baig, managing director and chief
economist at DBS Bank Ltd. in Singapore. "Bias toward further
monetary and fiscal easing will remain in 2020, in our view."
Price
Shock
Nevertheless,
the threat of a price shock is real. Nomura Holdings Inc. economists
recently warned of three potential triggers of higher food costs --
weather-related shocks, higher oil prices and a sharp depreciation in
the dollar -- saying emerging and frontier markets are most at risk
since food costs make up a larger portion of their consumers' income.
The
key will be whether the increases begin to feed into consumers'
longer-term inflation expectations, which could drive up wages and
core inflation in a spiral, said Sonal Varma, Nomura's chief
economist for India and Asia ex-Japan.
"This
is a big policy dilemma for central banks, to have supply-side driven
higher food inflation while growth is weakening," Varma said.
"The question is: Do central banks believe that this is durable
or that it's transitory?"
Here's
how the phenomenon is playing out in key emerging markets:
China
Pork
prices doubled in October following massive livestock culls to
protect against swine fever, pushing up consumer inflation to 3.8%,
the highest level since January 2012. Though pork prices have since
come off their recent highs, economists expect inflation to peak at
5% or 6% in January. Inflation at that level could impede central
bank efforts to ease monetary policy and boost an economy amid an
ongoing trade war and weak domestic demand.
In
the meantime, swine fever is jumping borders, with neighboring
Vietnam culling almost 6 million pigs to prevent the spread of the
disease. It hasn't showed up yet in Vietnam's CPI -- partly because
high food prices a year ago have skewed the statistical base -- but
the impact likely will be reflected in coming months, said Alex
Holmes, an Asia economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in Singapore.
Live pig prices in November are up almost 30% from a year earlier,
according to an industry group.
India
In
India, where spikes in the cost of onions have sparked social unrest
in years past, a 26% year-on-year rise in vegetable prices pushed
October headline inflation above the Reserve Bank's threshold of 4%
for the first time in 15 months.
That
runs up against a central bank intent on easing policy to spur
growth. Data due Friday is likely to show India's gross domestic
product grew 4.5% in the July-September quarter, its slowest pace
since early 2013, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.
The
latest Bloomberg survey shows consumer price inflation expected to
peak at 4.8% in the October-December period, before tapering off.
Turkey
Food
inflation hovered near 30% in the first quarter and has remained
above 15% for much of the year, due to a currency crisis in August
2018 coupled with supply-chain issues and a heavy reliance on natural
irrigation. The government has taken to buying produce directly from
farmers and selling it in cities, with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
denouncing alleged price-gougers as traitors and terrorists. Recent
droughts in grain-producing provinces raise concerns about possible
supply constraints next year, with the central bank expecting food
inflation at 11% by the end of 2020.
Africa
A
regional drought has curbed food output in some southern African
countries. Driven by increases in the cost of corn products,
food-price growth has pushed Zambian inflation to a three-year high,
and monthly food inflation in Zimbabwe has reached almost 50% as
supplies dwindle. In Nigeria, the price of imported rice has surged
7.3% since August after President Muhammadu Buhari ordered border
closures, partly to counter widespread food smuggling.
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