Why Are Food Prices Rising So Fast?
Economic Collapse
Blog
If you do much
grocery shopping, you have probably noticed that the cost of food
has been rising at a very brisk pace over the past year. So why
are food prices rising so fast? According to Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke, inflation is still very low and the economy
is improving. So what is going on here? When I go to the grocery
store these days, there are very few things that I will buy unless
they are on sale. In fact, I have noticed that many of the new "sale
prices" are the old regular prices. Other items have had their packages
reduced in size in order to hide the price increases. But with millions
of American families just barely scraping by as it is, what is going
to happen if food prices keep rising this rapidly?
The food prices
are especially painful if you are trying to eat healthy. Most of
the low price stuff in the grocery stores is garbage. Eating the
"typical American diet" is a highway to cancer, heart disease and
diabetes.
But if you
try to stick to food that is "healthy" or "organic" you can blow
through hundreds of dollars in a heartbeat. In fact, the reality
is that tens of millions of American families have now essentially
been priced out of a healthy diet.
Soon there
will be millions more American families that will not even be able
to afford an unhealthy diet.
Some recent
statistics compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics are absolutely
staggering. According to a
recent CNBC article, over the past year many of the most popular
foods in America have absolutely soared in price....
Coffee,
for instance, is up 40 percent. Celery is 28 percent higher while
butter prices rose 26.4 percent. Rounding out the top five are
bacon, at 23.5 percent, and cabbage, at 23.3 percent.
Unfortunately,
it looks like the trend of rising food prices is accelerating. Just
look at what the CNBC
article says happened in the month of April alone....
Just
in April—the most recent month for which data is available—grapes
went up nearly 30 percent, cabbage jumped about 17 percent and
orange juice surged more than 5 percent.
Meat is becoming
more expensive as well. Since March 2009, livestock prices have
risen by
138%.
So when Ben
Bernanke tells us that inflation is very low, that really is a lie.
On the stuff that people spend money on every day (like food and
gas), prices have gone up dramatically.
Sadly, this
is not just a phenomenon that is happening in the United States.
The truth is that the entire planet is rapidly approaching a horrific
global
food crisis.
Over the past
year, the global price of food has risen by
37 percent and this has pushed approximately 44 million more
people around the world into poverty.
When food prices
rise in the U.S. it may be painful for millions of American families,
but around the world a rise in food prices can mean the difference
between surviving and not surviving.
That is why
it has been so alarming that the global price of wheat has approximately
doubled over the past year.
But it is not
just wheat that has been soaring. Check out what a
recent Bloomberg article had to say about what has been happening
to many key agricultural commodities over the past year....
Corn
futures advanced 77 percent in the past 12 months in Chicago trading,
a global benchmark, rice gained 39 percent and sugar jumped 64
percent. There will be shortages in corn, wheat, soybeans, coffee
and cocoa this year or next, according to Utrecht, Netherlands-based
Rabobank Groep. Prices also rose after droughts and floods from
Australia to Canada ruined crops last year. European farmers are
now contending with their driest growing season in more than three
decades.
Even before
this recent spike in food prices the world was struggling to get
enough food to everybody. It has been estimated that somewhere in
the world someone starves to death every
3.6 seconds, and 75 percent of those are children under the
age of five.
So what is
going to happen if food prices keep on rising at the current pace?
That is a very
good question.
We really are
starting to move into unprecedented territory. Nobody is quite sure
what is going to happen next.
So why is all
of this happening?
Well, a lot
of people are blaming the
Federal Reserve. All of the "quantitative easing" that the Fed
has done has flooded the financial markets with money. All of that
money had to go somewhere. Much of it has pumped up the prices of
hard assets such as oil, gold and agricultural commodities.
But it is not
just the Fed that is to blame. The truth is that central banks all
over the world have been recklessly
printing money.
When the amount
of money in an economy goes up, the purchasing value of all existing
money goes down. In the United States, that means that your dollars
will not go as far as they did before.
But it is not
just monetary policy that is affecting food prices. In 2010 and
2011 we have seen an unprecedented wave of natural disasters and
crazy weather. This has caused problems with crops all over the
globe.
In addition,
U.S. economic policies are also playing a role. At this point, almost
a third of all corn grown in the United States is used for fuel.
This is putting a lot of stress on the price of corn.
Also, there
are some long-term trends that are not in our favor. For example,
the
systematic depletion of the Ogallala Aquifer could eventually
turn "America's Breadbasket" back into the "Dust Bowl". If you have
not heard of this problem I would encourage you to do some research
on it.
Things are
going to get a lot worse, but already America is having a really
hard time feeding itself. According to Feeding America's 2010 hunger
study, more
than 37 million Americans are now being served by food pantries
and soup kitchens.
So is that
number unusual?
Yes, it sure
is.
The number
of Americans that are going to food pantries and soup kitchens has
increased by
46% since 2006.
That is not
a good trend.
Another stat
that I talk a lot about in this column is the number of Americans
on food stamps.
Right now,
there are 44 million Americans on food stamps. Nearly half of them
are
children.
How did we
ever get to the point as a nation where more than 20 million children
end up on food stamps?
It is estimated
that one
out of every four American children is currently on food stamps,
and it is being projected that approximately
50 percent of all U.S. children will be on food stamps at some
point in their lives before they reach the age of 18.
So what is
going to happen if the economy gets even worse?
What is going
to happen if there really is a major food crisis in this country
someday?
Food prices
have been going up for decades and they are going to continue to
go up. But the frightening thing is how fast they are increasing
now.
As the U.S.
middle class continues
to be destroyed, the number of Americans that can't afford to
buy enough food is going to continue to rise. Food prices are rising
much faster than wages are, and that is not likely to change any
time soon.
Food is rapidly
becoming one of the most important global economic issues of this
decade. The farther one looks down the road, the bleaker things
look for the global food situation.
I hope you
are prepared for that.
Reprinted
with permission from the Economic
Collapse Blog.
June
25, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Economic
Collapse Blog
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