World food prices hit 10-year high in 2021
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[January 06, 2022] PARIS
(Reuters) - World food prices jumped 28% in 2021 to their highest level
in a decade and hopes for a return to more stable market conditions this
year are slim, the U.N.'s food agency said on Thursday.
The Food and Agriculture Organization's (FAO) food price index, which
tracks the most globally traded food commodities, averaged 125.7 points
in 2021, the highest since 131.9 in 2011.
The monthly index eased slightly in December but had climbed for the
previous four months in a row, reflecting harvest setbacks and strong
demand over the past year. [GRA/]
Higher food prices have contributed to a broader surge in inflation as
economies recover from the coronavirus crisis and the FAO has warned
that the higher costs are putting poorer populations at risk in
countries reliant on imports.
In its latest update, the food agency was cautious about whether price
pressures might abate this year.
"While normally high prices are expected to give way to increased
production, the high cost of inputs, ongoing global pandemic and ever
more uncertain climatic conditions leave little room for optimism about
a return to more stable market conditions even in 2022," FAO senior
economist Abdolreza Abbassian said in a statement.
A surge in the price of fertilisers, linked in turn to spiralling energy
prices, has ramped up the cost of so-called inputs used by farmers to
produce crops, raising doubts over yield prospects for next year's
harvests.
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Customers walk past a fruit stall at a street market, in Mexico
City, Mexico December 17, 2021. REUTERS/Luis Cortes/File Photo
In December, prices for all categories in the food price index bar dairy
products fell, with vegetable oils and sugar falling significantly, the agency
said in its monthly update.
It cited a lull in demand during the month, concerns about the impact of the
Omicron coronavirus variant, and supplies from southern hemisphere wheat
harvests for the declines.
However, all categories in the index showed sharp increases during 2021 as a
whole and the FAO's vegetable oil price index hit a record high.
Crop futures have seen volatile trading at the start of 2022, with oilseed
markets stirred by drought in South America and floods in Malaysia. [POI/]
Dairy prices maintained their recent strength in December, helped by lower milk
production in Western Europe and Oceania, the FAO said.
(Reporting by Gus Trompiz; Editing by David Clarke)
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