Food prices up in Pak, blame Musharraf, Food prices up in India, blame who?

Re: Food prices up in Pak, blame Musharraf, Food prices up in India, blame who?

Oil has made all other goods more expensive. Transportation costs should be under 6% of wholesale costs for most bullk. Now it is probably more like 15 to even 20.

Secondlly - more and more countries have bigger strategic reserves - procurement related to that has enhanced demand.

Thirdly, India and China are simply consuming more.

Plus their ascendancu has weakened the dollar thus inflating almost all trade based on usd

Re: Food prices up in Pak, blame Musharraf, Food prices up in India, blame who?

Food prices drive India inflation

Inflation in India has hit a three-year high as a result of spiralling food and energy costs, official figures show. India’s wholesale price index, released weekly, hit 7% for the year up to 22 March, the highest since December 2004.
The government has been taking steps to control prices, banning exports of non-basmati rice and scrapping import duties on cooking oils and maize. Economists said the data could trigger a rise in interest rates this month, earlier than many had expected. India’s Economic Times says the government is considering a price ceiling on commodities if all other measures fail to bring down inflation - a law last used in the 1970s.

In India, the wholesale price index, which measures inflation at the “factory gate”, is more closely watched than the consumer price index because it tracks a wider range of goods. The consumer price index reflects shop and market prices. “Inflation is beyond anybody’s expectations and I expect further firefighting measures from the government,” said D K Joshi, principal economist at Crisil. “One can forget lowering of interest rates for some time to come.” **Record prices of rice, wheat and other foodstuff, along with the sky-high oil price, have fanned inflation worldwide. This has prompted many governments to impose price controls and curb exports of essential goods. **

India has raised the cost of borrowing nine times since October 2004. Growth is expected to slow this coming financial year to about 8%, its weakest rate of expansion since 2005, but still a robust rate of growth. In the year ending 31 March 2008, the economy grew 8.7%.

Re: Food prices up in Pak, blame Musharraf, Food prices up in India, blame who?

World Bank tackles food emergency

The World Bank has announced emergency measures to tackle rising food prices around the world. World Bank head Robert Zoellick warned that 100 million people in poor countries could be pushed deeper into poverty by spiralling prices. The crisis has sparked recent food riots in several countries including Haiti and Egypt. The World Bank endorsed Mr Zoellick’s “new deal” action plan for a long-term boost to agricultural production. Emergency help would include an additional $10m (£5m) to Haiti, where several people were killed in food riots last week, and a doubling of agricultural loans to African farmers.

Starvation risk

Mr Zoellick’s proposals were endorsed by the World Bank’s steering committee of finance and development ministers at a meeting in Washington. The World Bank and its sister organisation, the IMF, have held a weekend of meetings that addressed rising food and energy prices as well as the credit crisis upsetting global financial markets. The leader of the International Monetary Fund last week said hundreds of thousands of people were at risk of starvation because of food shortages. Prices have risen sharply in recent months, driven by increased demand, poor weather in some countries that has ruined crops and reduced production area, thanks to an increase in the use of land to grow crops for transport fuels. The price of staple crops such as wheat, rice and corn have all risen, leading to an increase in overall food prices of 83% in the last three years, the World Bank has said. The sharp rises have led to protests and unrest in many countries, including Egypt, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, the Philippines and Indonesia. In Haiti, protests last week turned violent, leading to the deaths of five people and the fall of the government. Restrictions on rice exports have been put in place in major producing countries such as India, China, Vietnam and Egypt. Importers such as Bangladesh, the Philippines and Afghanistan have been hit hard.

Rich urged to act

“We have to put our money where our mouth is now so that we can put food into hungry mouths,” Mr Zoellick said. “It’s as stark as that.” He called for more aid to provide food to needy people in poor countries and help for small farmers. He said the World Bank was working to provide money for seeds for planting in the new season. He also urged wealthy donor countries to quickly fill the World Food Programme’s estimated $500m (£250m) funding shortfall. Mr Zoellick’s “New Deal for Global Food Policy” also seeks to boost agricultural policy in poor countries in the longer-term. On Saturday, the head of the IMF, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, warned of mass starvation and other dire consequences if food prices continued to rise sharply. “As we know, learning from the past, those kind of questions sometimes end in war,” he said. He said the problem could lead to trade imbalances that may eventually affect developed nations, “so it is not only a humanitarian question”.