Food
Prices Are Soaring Further Into The Danger Zone
27
September, 2012
Santiago,
Chile
Last
summer, two researchers from the New England Complex Systems
Institute published a short paper examining the correlation between
rising food prices and civil unrest. It was a timely analysis, to say
the least. A number of food riots were occurring throughout the
world, not to mention waves of revolution sparked by the high cost of
food.
This
is nothing new; throughout history whenever people have struggled to
put food on the table for their families, social unrest has been a
common consequence.
The
French Revolution is a classic example; after decades of
unsustainable fiscal and monetary practices that wrecked the French
economy, the harvest season and subsequent winter of 1788 were
particularly harsh. People went hungry, and it ultimately started the
revolution.
The
researchers’ analysis went a step further, though; they modeled the
relationship between food prices and social unrest to reach a simple
conclusion– whenever the UN Food and Agricultural Organization
(FAO)’s global food price index climbs above 210, conditions ripen
for social unrest.
Today,
the FAO’s food index is at 213… and rising. Netherlands-based
Rabobank recently published its own analysis, forecasting further
rises in food prices well into the 3rd quarter of 2013.
There
are so many factors driving food prices higher. From a demand
perspective, world population is growing at an extraordinary rate…
plus the rise of billions of people from developing countries
(especially in Asia) into the middle class is quickening demand for
resource-intensive foods like beef.
From
a supply perspective, drought, soil erosion, and reduction of
available farmland all put significant pressure on global
agricultural output. And finally, from a monetary perspective, the
enormous amount of paper currency being printed in the world is
finding its way into agricultural commodities.
I
cannot envision a slowdown in any of these factors anytime soon.
Central bankers will continue printing, people will continue
procreating, developing countries will continue becoming wealthier,
etc. So we should absolutely expect rising food prices for quite some
time.
Long-term,
technology will ultimately solve these problems… but large-scale
implementation is a long way off, and it may certainly be a bumpy
ride ahead.
Individuals
can hedge their exposure in a number of different ways. The simple
option is to invest in agricultural ETFs or long-term futures
contracts. But I can hardly recommend this as a course of action
given the massive systemic risk in the financial system.
Just
as we often recommend holding physical gold and silver rather than
owning a gold ETF, it’s much better to own physical agricultural
assets.
If
you’re on a budget, small gardens can be planted for a pittance as
long as you’re willing to roll up your sleeves. Even if you live in
an urban area surrounded by a sea of concrete, tabletop hydroponic
and aquaponic systems can be set up on the cheap… and they’re
easy to maintain.
If
you have more capital to deploy, consider buying agricultural
property, preferably overseas. Buying foreign real estate is a great
way to move money overseas, plus it gives you a place to go if you
really need to escape.
As
I survey farmland prices around the world, the best region to buy is
South America, particularly Chile, Paraguay, or Uruguay. I’ll have
more detail on those locations in a future letter.
Bottom
line, if the analysis is correct and food prices continue to rise,
agriculture will be one of the best investments of the decade. As Jim
Rogers has said so many times before, it will be farmers driving
Maseratis, not stock brokers. Plus, you will have secured yourself a
steady, reliable supply of food.
Even
if the analysis is wrong and all the world’s food challenges are
magically solved, it’s hard to imagine being worse off for having
your own food supply… or owning beautiful, well-located land in a
rapidly developing foreign country.
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