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Mon 14 Apr 2008 17:43
by Kevin McGehee
50° and cloudy in Coweta County, GA
[Our Times]
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Others have been making the case that using food as fuel is a bad idea, but one of the other factors has only been mentioned by one observer that I’m aware of.
Still, the higher U.S. prices seem eye-popping after years of low inflation. Eggs cost 25 percent more in February than they did a year ago, according to the USDA. Milk and other dairy products jumped 13 percent, chicken and other poultry nearly 7 percent.
USDA economist Ephraim Leibtag explained the jumps in a recent presentation to the Food Marketing Institute, starting with the factors everyone knows about: sharply higher commodity costs for wheat, corn, soybeans and milk, plus higher energy and transportation costs.
The other reasons are more complex. Rapid economic growth in China and India has increased demand for meat there, and exports of U.S. products, such as corn, have set records as the weak dollar has made them cheaper. That’s lowered the supply of corn available for sale in the U.S., raising prices here. Ethanol production has also diverted corn from dinner tables and into fuel tanks.» Food Costs Rising Fastest in 17 Years
It’s all well and good to pursue world trade—but Americans gotta eat too.
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