(Minyanville.com) The current prices in your grocery store don’t presage an approaching storm. But that’s exactly what’s coming, says Bill Lapp, president of Advanced Economic Solutions, a consulting firm in Omaha, Nebraska, and the former chief economist for ConAgra Foods (CAG).
In the last nine months, he says, the prices of corn and wheat have doubled; the price of corn alone (nearly $7 a bushel) is three times higher than the previous norm. Lapp estimates that the higher prices for these commodities — for the grains we eat and those used to feed livestock — amounts to some $40 billion in costs not yet passed on to the consumer. But the higher price tags are coming “sooner rather than later,” says Lapp. He calls it a “big liability in front of us.”
There are several reasons for the accelerated rise in grain prices: demand for foodstuffs from developing countries, like China and Brazil; weather events (such as last year’s severe drought in Russia) that stretched already-tight stocks of grains; a weak US dollar; and the US biofuel policy that taps corn for ethanol.
Although the American public may not be aware of the lag time between the rise in commodity prices and an increase in wholesale food prices, in countries like China, India, and in parts of the Middle East, where food processing is less prevalent than in the US and groceries occupy a greater share of individuals’ budgets, people are already finding that out. In January, the UN World Price Food Index reported a year-over-year increase of 28%. Many believe that increased food prices played a major role in the current unrest in the Middle East.
So what can Americans expect? What will basic groceries cost us one year from now, or four years from now, in 2015? To find out, we asked Lapp to analyze the major categories of groceries, as defined by the benchmark Consumer Price Index (CPI), and measure the share of their costs related to commodities.
(Roughly one-third of the cost of groceries depend on the underlying commodities, and the rest of the cost reflects non-commodity attributes like labor, manufacturing, packaging, and distribution, which have seen modest increases in recent years.)
Taking several complicated factors into account, Lapp’s prediction is that overall consumer prices — as measured by the CPI — will rise an average of 3-4% annually from 2011 to 2015. Over that period, he expects to see a higher rate of increase in the early years — because of the already substantial increase in commodity prices about to find its way into grocery stores. He expects the meat industry — where corn is commonly used as feed for livestock — to experience the most dramatic spike.
Using Lapp’s analysis, Minyanville looked at how much our regular trip to the grocery store might cost in 2015 compared to now. We used current retail prices — averages recorded for US cities by the Bureau of Labor Statistics — to find our baseline costs. (In Canada, we used prices from Statistics Canada citing average prices for February 2011.)
Here’s what we discovered in eight major categories:
Read the whole article here.
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March 29th, 2011
Elisheva Wiriaatmadja
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There is also the cost of the raw materials for fertilisers to take into account – oil and phosphates – which are climbing quite steeply at the moment.
The last century has been all about innovation and producing food more cheply and efficient;y and there are no real gains left to be made in this area.
The food prices are definitely going to keep going up – the unknown is how high will they go.
definitely noticing this lately.. the costs of lunches are skyrocketing