Food Costs Likely To Rise as Farmers' Expenses Shoot Up
Bad policy and unpredictable nature are sending food prices through the roof.

Famine is one of the four horsemen of the apocalypse for good reason; hunger was an unwelcome companion for most of human history. The threat it poses declined in recent decades because of innovations in agriculture and increasing prosperity. But the largely policy-inflicted economic disruptions of the past two years partially reversed progress made towards feeding the world and alleviating poverty. Now, with food prices on the rise, there's a danger that hunger will follow.
"I want to say this loud and clear right now, that we risk a very low crop in the next harvest," Svein Tore Holsether, the CEO and president of fertilizer giant Yara International, warned in November. "I'm afraid we're going to have a food crisis."
Holsether worried about the rising cost of energy and especially of natural gas, which is needed to make ammonia from which urea, a key fertilizer component, is synthesized.
"Prices for the humble chemical — yes, the stuff in urine — are soaring to levels not seen in over a decade," The New York Times agreed a month later. "People and industries of all kinds are feeling the shocks."
A combination of always-unpredictable nature, bad policy, and busted supply chains (also largely from policy decisions) dramatically hiked prices for natural gas and its products. Prices for alternatives to urea are also rising because of demand and parallel political decisions. The U.S. Treasury agreed in December to suspend sanctions on potash from Belarus from which about 20 percent of the world's supply of the stuff is sourced, but other high trade barriers remain in place for fertilizer and its components. The result is that major inputs for producing the food that we eat are becoming increasingly dear when they can be found at all.
"Among farmers and ranchers, very few topics are being discussed as much as the skyrocketing cost of fertilizer and increasing concerns regarding availability," the American Farm Bureau reports.
If that's frightening for American farmers and the people who consume their products, it's potentially disastrous for the rest of the world.
"High fertilizer prices could exert inflationary pressures on food prices, compounding food security concerns at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change are making access to food more difficult," the World Bank notes.
That cautionary tone is a little behind the times, since global food prices were already up by an average of 27.3 percent from a year earlier at the end of November, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization's food price index. Worse, people's ability to cope with rising food prices has been hit by pandemic-policy-induced setbacks to decades of increasing prosperity.
"In 2021, the average incomes of people in the bottom 40 percent of the global income distribution are 6.7 percent lower than pre-pandemic projections, while those of people in the top 40 percent are down 2.8 percent," the World Bank noted in October.
A mix of increasing poverty and rising food prices is a dangerous cocktail for a troubled planet.
"Higher farm input costs, expensive shipping and good demand provide for a grim combination," predicts Holland's agriculture-oriented Rabobank in its recent report, Outlook 2022: Hell in the Handbasket. "We should see these inflationary pressures upstream move along the supply chain to reach consumers in 2022, with uncertain social consequences."
Not all of the factors that led us to this unfortunate point were foreseeable or preventable, of course. Nobody could have anticipated that Hurricane Ida would disrupt the production of natural gas "more than any other hurricane over the past ten years" in the words of the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Nor could anybody have known that low winds would hobble Europe's growing reliance on renewable energy or that drought would kneecap hydropower production in China and elsewhere, throwing those regions back to fossil fuels in competition with other world users.
What was predictable, though, is that nature wouldn't be predictable. Plans dependent on winds and rains adhering to production schedules were doomed to fail eventually. That they failed after policymakers had already disrupted manufacturing, shipping, and overall economic activity in response to COVID-19 just accelerated an unavoidable reckoning.
"In the fall, soaring electricity demand led the southwestern province of Yunnan, a key phosphate producer, to order drastic production cuts by energy-hungry industries, including fertilizer," The New York Times reported.
"Major fertilizer producers Yara International ASA and CF Industries Holdings Inc. said soaring energy costs are forcing them to halt some output of nutrients crucial for growing crops," BloombergQuint noted of the effects of Europe's energy costs.
Curbs on fertilizer exports from China and Russia add to the problem, as the governments of those countries reserve limited supplies for their internal markets. But the U.S. suffers self-inflicted wounds from trade barriers on foreign products.
"Mosaic has almost single-handedly erected an insurmountable tariff barrier to keep its top competitors in Morocco and Russia out of the U.S. phosphate market," the National Corn Growers Association objected in a December letter to fertilizer giant Mosaic company over its cultivation of policy-making friends. "Only 15% of phosphorous imports now come into the U.S. without tariffs."
The Biden administration also discourages the production of fossil fuels. It does so with the idea of encouraging a national move to renewable energy, but one (presumably) unforeseen consequence is to tighten the supply of materials required for making fertilizer needed to grow food.
"Heavy-handed interference in market economies tends to produce the same pathologies we see in socialist economies, including shortages and inflation," British economist Philip Pilkington commented earlier this year.
That interference is tempting for government officials who insist on seeing the world as something they can fine-tune according to their policy preferences. Inevitably, they're proven wrong, though usually not in disastrous ways. This time though, economic meddling looks to be amplifying nature's unpredictability to usher in a hungry new year.
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Does spittin' tobaccy qualify as "food"? Because the leading economics expert in this comment section says that's the only item whose price has increased.
#InflationIsAWingnutMyth
Pluggo the prognosticator portends price parity.
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Hmm, if we need megatons of manure, where could we get that?
1600 Pa. Ave
Theres a 24/7 bullshit operation there.
we needn't worry. every day i feel like i see more people legitimately suggesting price controls are the solution, so we're fine. /s
Cousin Jimmy suggested wage and price controls and received a lot of hate for it.
Not sure its a bad idea.
I am sure Biden is.
Fuck Joe Biden and his Little Dog Fauci
The customer price of petroleum has risen significantly over the past year. And that is an input cost to food production and delivery. Al Jazeera reported a few days ago that global food prices rose 30% in 2021.
Roll your own in 2022.
False.
.Producers and shippers dont pay consumer prices for fuel.
You responded to a statement that wasn’t made. Grats.
Producers and shippers don't pay for fuel. Those who transport are the ones who do, and yes, they DO pay consumer rates.
Drive past a truck stop, check the price on the sign. You pay that, the trucking companies pay the same price (unless they have agreed to buy x number of gallons per year in exchange for a price break).
Ah the ag shortage lies...again.
The SAME lies were told my the Main Sleaze Media in 2012.
The Trolls exploded across comment pages with stupidity like " corn shortage, people will starve without bread."
BREADS made of WHEAT.
Ag Day, a CREDIBLE source for Ag info, reported that in 2012 there were TWELVE TRILLION excess bushels of corn backed up at ports at New Orleans at the same time the Media were lying about shortages.
What these liars who know nothing about ag miss is the great over- production of ag products. Corns running about 200-220 bu./ ac..
Years ago it was half that or less.
Better methods like no- till, hybrids, GMOS etc have doubled output.
The problem isnt production, its machinery costs. $ 1 M plus for a combine. That leads to having to sell immediately after harvest when prices are low.
My in laws farm in IA...they farm with paid for old machinery and make money most years.
Cool story, and in no way related to a potential shortage of fertilizer and how that would impact Ag.
is related. Apparently you dont understand how it is related and dont want to know.
Remain...ignorant..its comfy
Price is 2 to 3 times higher. No shortage. mostly driven by the exploding cost of gas and oil.
...PS theres been such a gross over --production of grain lately the elevators cant hold it...they lay it on the GROUND and put tarps over it.
..they lay it on the GROUND and put tarps over it.
Nope.
The put it on the ground and tarp it. Short term. To take advantage of the "carry" in the market.
The "carry" is interest, storage, and basis improvement.
Bushel of corn Nov 1st is $5.00 Feb 1st 5.30 Storage is .06, Int .05
Elevator picks up .19 for putting it on the ground.
dave is proving to be good at ranting, poor at thinking.
He still claims inflation is not possible since the increased money supply is not paper money, seemingly not well-enough read that, post WWII, Camel cigarettes were currency in western Europe.
More than willing to mute ignoramuses from the right or the left and dave's getting close.
Yeah. The safety on his mute has been selected to “off.”
dave, STFU. Just that, STFU. You're embarrassing yourself at nearly every post.
STFU until you can post regarding an issue you really know about. So far, you're batting .000.
TWELVE TRILLION excess bushels of corn backed up at ports at New Orleans
Total corn production 14.2 Billion subtact out ethanol, and feed, and cut the export way down.
Objection: Assumes facts not in evidence.
Exactly. Would be good to see how those dots cam be connected.
“Nor would anybody know that low winds would hobble Europe”
Easily predictable and predicted by multiple persons.
The entire problem with renewable energy is the fact that it is intermittent.
Not to mention the giant amounts of land needed for low density energy sources like solar and wind.
No doubt. It seems the ClimAstrologists don't mind the miles and miles of giant wind mills and solar panels covering and scarring the Earth as long as we're not driving our own cars.
That cautionary tone is a little behind the times, since global food prices were already up by an average of 27.3 percent from a year earlier at the end of November
I've been told that this is a good thing by several of the usual suspects around here.
As the left destroys all the gas and diesel equipment used in agriculture to "Stop Climate Change", kills off the irrigation water out of some B.S. "Conserving Water" plan, Taxes the crap out of farmers for their "Land Rent" of the Nazi-State, Steals their land out of "Land Management" bills, topped off with Animal-Rights psychopaths compulsive harassment......
Psycho-City Libtards are getting exactly what they pushed for - "central planned" starvation, poverty for all and state genocide.
Remember when the USA was about Individual Liberty and Justice for all?
"...Psycho-City Libtards are getting exactly what they pushed for - "central planned" starvation, poverty for all and state genocide..."
We have turned over a large part of what was a (largely) market driven economy to central planning.
We did this by allowing a huge power grab by governments justified as 'emergency powers' in response to a disease which will end up being far less dangerous than the power grab.
+1000000000.
IJ used to get the majority of the year-end contributions. In an email exchange with Scott Bullock regarding the immense government over-reach in early 2020, he claimed to see it as a minor issue, with IJ focused on 'long range' matters. My suggestion that it would take a year to claw back the monthly power-grabs by Newsom, et all, were met with a lack of concern.
IJ now gets a couple of hundred, these guys (Pacific Legal Foundation - https://pacificlegal.org/ - ) get what IJ used to and more. They focused on the power grabs early and have kept that in the cross-hairs.
If anyone has an org which is doing more, I'd love to hear about it; this is serious and will cause long-term damaging effects. Those who focus on it are due support and will get mine.
Yeah, Biden is due a fucking with Tony's dick, but Newsom, et al, are due so earlier.
Let me add the infantile assholes focused on personality rather than results posting here (Brandyshit, sarc, turd and the lot of lefty shits claiming 'both sides' while supporting what they deserve and we get): Jam JFree's PANIC flag up your ass, stick first, shitbags.
Yes, but I am very old.
likely to rise? Has risen, will rise, huge rises.
Reason soft peddling Biden's bad policy once again.
Biden one big fuck up.
Obviously you don’t have an educated opinion on this subject. You just want to sit in your parents basement and jerk off to Trump.
Obvilusly, you are a TDS-addled pile of shit. Fuck off and die; make the world a better place, asshole.
Keep sucking Trumps dick and when you’re done suck on a tailpipe.
You’re a pathetic waste of oxygen
"The threat it poses declined in recent decades because of innovations in agriculture and increasing prosperity. " And most importantly, PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS AND FREE TRADE!
Input costs has nothing to do with the price of farm commodities. That price is a supply demand equation, not a cost of production equation.
Uh, you need to explain your claim; it makes no sense at all.
Any increase in input costs affects my company's sale prices, and does so in 'futures' retail pricing.
Don’t you know farmers will continue to toil in the field even if they are losing money?
How does Trump’s dick taste?
FFS, we need to bring back the previous president's fossil fuel policies and get the cost of gas and diesel down.
Add this to the list of important stuff that Reason ignores.
Easy solution to rising food prices: Just print more food stamps.