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No limit to soaring food prices

muleman

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
Experts: No Limit for Soaring Food Prices

Thursday, 17 Mar 2011 07:07 AM
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Americans are noticing higher prices at the grocery store, and it's about to get worse.
Food prices at the wholesale level rose last month by the most in 36 years. Cold weather accounted for most of it, forcing stores and restaurants to pay more for green peppers, lettuce and other vegetables, but meat and dairy prices surged, too.
The big questions are how long food prices will keep rising and how high they'll go.
The impact is already visible. Wendy's, paying higher prices for tomatoes, now puts them on hamburgers only by request. Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts have raised prices because they pay more for coffee beans. Supermarkets warn customers that produce may be of lower quality, or limited.
"It has thrown the whole industry into a tizzy," says Dan Bates, director of merchandising for the produce division of grocery chain Supervalu Inc.
Food prices rose 3.9 percent last month, the most since November 1974. Most of the increase was because harsh winter freezes in Florida, Texas and other Southern states, which damaged crops.
At the same time, global prices for corn, wheat, soybeans, coffee and other commodities have risen sharply in the past year. That's raised the price of animal feed, which has pushed up the cost of eggs, ground beef and milk.
Paul Ashworth, an economist at Capital Economics, says his firm has warned since last summer that spikes in commodity prices would eventually work their way down to wholesalers and consumers, "and here it is. There is plenty more to come over the next few months."
Crop prices began to increase last summer, after droughts slammed harvests in Russia and several other countries. Sharp growth in new world economic powers like India and China has also increased demand.
Overall, the producer price index, which tracks price changes before they reach the consumer, rose 1.6 percent in February, the Labor Department said Wednesday. That's double the rise from the previous month and the biggest increase since June 2009. The index is adjusted to account for seasonal variations.
More expensive food means people have less money for the casual spending that helps the economy grow and create jobs. And it adds to growing concerns about inflation down the road, still a worry two years after the Great Recession.
Another is the weak housing market, which most economists say is years away from a full recovery. The government said Wednesday that home construction plunged in February to the lowest level since April 2009 and the second-lowest in more than a half-century.
The stock market dropped sharply on the disappointing U.S. economic reports and growing concerns about Japan's nuclear crisis. The Dow Jones industrial average fell by more than 240 points, or 2 percent.
Hints of steeper food prices will likely show up in the government's report on consumer prices, due out Thursday. The consumer price index is forecast to rise 0.4 percent, the same as the previous two months, but the wholesale report caused several economists to warn it could be higher.
Many economists expect food prices to keep rising through the end of the year. Consumer food prices will be about 5 percent higher this fall than the previous time last year, according to RBC Capital Markets. That's up from the current annual pace of about 2 percent.
Food prices are already the highest since the U.N. began keeping track in 1990.
Corn prices have almost doubled since last summer, although they did dip this week after Japan's devastating earthquake and tsunami.
The harsh winter took a toll on restaurants, grocery stores and consumers. Normally if there is a shortage of one product in Florida, such as green peppers, companies can turn to Mexico or Texas. But all the major vegetable producing regions were harmed. That has led to everything from smaller heads of lettuce to higher prices for bananas and scarred fruit.
"This year was basically a perfect storm," says Supervalu's Bates, who hopes things will improve now that the spring growing season is almost here.
Ashley Sewell, who works three part-time jobs in Fort Worth, Texas, says she sees the difference when she goes out to eat or shop for groceries. She's an avid cook who used to wander the grocery-store aisles looking for inspiration. Now, she takes a list.
"I used to cook for my friends and neighbors. I can't do that anymore," she says.
Americans are also being hit by the highest gas prices in more than two years. The national average price Wednesday was $3.55 a gallon, up 42 cents from a month earlier, according to the AAA's Daily Fuel Gauge.
Still, the U.S. is mostly insulated from more devastating impact of higher food prices around the globe. Last month, the World Bank estimated that higher prices for corn, wheat and oil have pushed 44 million people into extreme poverty since last June.
Americans spend a much smaller portion of their budgets on food — about 14 percent — compared with 40 percent to 50 percent in developing countries. Labor makes up a bigger portion of food prices in the U.S., while in developing countries people are more likely to buy items like wheat to make their own bread, making them more susceptible to swings in commodity prices.
 

muleman

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
Has anyone bought any produce in the last 2 weeks? Wife saw the prices the other day and decided we don't really need any. I did break down and buy a cantaloupe for desert.
 

Cowboy

Wait for it.
GOLD Site Supporter
Has anyone bought any produce in the last 2 weeks? Wife saw the prices the other day and decided we don't really need any. I did break down and buy a cantaloupe for desert.
My wife just got back from the store . I was just getting ready to take the disk of the tractor & put the finish mower on & she said I aint done yet . So I'm guessing I'll be breaking ground on a much bigger garden over the weekend .:w00t2:
 

muleman

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
The way prices are soaring I might have to take over for some of the Amish that are moving and run a roadside stand this summer. We don't buy that much produce for just the 2 of us but when green peppers are over a buck each and tomatoes are that or more I can see we will be growing some this coming winter. I have some tomatoes we just repotted for the 3rd time today that are about 30 in. tall and should start blossoming soon. She wants to put at least 3 in 5 gallon buckets with cages so we should have some ready by middle of May.
 

EastTexFrank

Well-known member
GOLD Site Supporter
My wife just got back from the store . I was just getting ready to take the disk of the tractor & put the finish mower on & she said I aint done yet . So I'm guessing I'll be breaking ground on a much bigger garden over the weekend .:w00t2:

You and me both Cowboy. When I told my wife that I wasn't putting in a big garden this year, she came back from the grocery store and told me that, if I wanted to eat, I better reconsider because she wasn't paying those prices for vegetables.

I've spent the last couple of days getting things ready to go. I've still got to haul some junk hay from the farm for mulch and weed suppression but I've just about got things where I want them ... just buying and planting to be done.

At least we have the choice about how much we grow, what we grow or .... don't. Some poor sucker living in an apartment in the "big city" .... they're pretty much fucked. :hammer::hammer::hammer:
 
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pirate_girl

legendary ⚓
GOLD Site Supporter
Has anyone bought any produce in the last 2 weeks? Wife saw the prices the other day and decided we don't really need any. I did break down and buy a cantaloupe for desert.
It's not just the produce.. it's the meat as well.
Canned soup and bread here, or eating out on the cheap might well be what saves my ass from going broke at the grocery store.
At least at work, I get a free lunch..
Thank God for cheap taters, rice and pasta.
Other than that... I'll go back to a healthier, more sensible way of eating.
When you consume 1 full meal per day, it's not so difficult in these times.
 

muleman

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
I have all the meat we could possibly eat and then some. We do buy some seafood and fresh fruit but we also have a lot of stuff canned and frozen so we don't buy much. Now that my Amish buddy is moving we are thinking about getting some chickens again. Don't know how our current dogs would do with them as they have never been around them. I do like fresh brown eggs.
 

EastTexFrank

Well-known member
GOLD Site Supporter
It's not just the produce.. it's the meat as well.

Well PG, I go over to the farm, lean on the fence and watch 30 cows plus their offspring just loving that new grass that coming up. Hamburger on the hoof. There's a lot to be said for being a country boy. I don't think that I'd want to go back to being a city dweller.

Besides, I've got a large garden at the house and a smaller one at the farm. Right now I'm about sick of asparagus. Those things just keep coming and coming. They're good (let's say great) but a guy can only eat so much of them. :smile::smile:
 

pirate_girl

legendary ⚓
GOLD Site Supporter
Well PG, I go over to the farm, lean on the fence and watch 30 cows plus their offspring just loving that new grass that coming up. Hamburger on the hoof. There's a lot to be said for being a country boy. I don't think that I'd want to go back to being a city dweller.

Besides, I've got a large garden at the house and a smaller one at the farm. Right now I'm about sick of asparagus. Those things just keep coming and coming. They're good (let's say great) but a guy can only eat so much of them. :smile::smile:
I love asparagus.
Send me some! :smile:
Actually, with the rising cost of food prices, I have been taking it easy and not going nuts at the grocery store and being a helluva lot more selective as to where my $$ go that will eventually end up in my tummy.
Peasant food/dishes that can be prepared simply and in a very healthy manner are what it's all about for me now.
Once in a while I run out for a take out, but that isn't sensible right now either.
 
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