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Food prices rising, but no shortage in U.S.

Tight supplies may ultimately force Americans to adjust diets

Food prices have risen substantially in recent years, and wheat supplies are the tightest they've been in decades.
Charlie Riedel / AP file
By Allison Linn
Senior writer
MSNBC
updated 11:57 a.m. ET April 29, 2008

Alison
Allison Linn
Senior writer

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Ask an overseas visitor what’s different about the United States, and one of the first things you’ll often hear about is our grocery stores — those endlessly long aisles piled high with all manner of grains, produce, meat and delicacies. For many visitors, it’s a hallmark of America’s largesse; for us, it’s a constant reminder that, whatever problems we may face here, we live in the land of plenty.

Now, news that some wholesale clubs appear to be seeing a run on food staples such as rice is raising the question of whether Americans could ever face a situation many of us can’t even fathom — a shortage of the food we take for granted.

The good news: Experts say the short answer is no.

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“I really don’t see any chance of that,” said Jerry Bange, chair of the World Agriculture Outlook Board for the Department of Agriculture.

Still, that doesn’t mean Americans aren’t facing any food woes. The price of staples such as corn, wheat and rice have skyrocketed in recent years, and the cost increases are not expected to abate any time soon. For Americans, that means higher prices for everything from bread to meat, since cattle and other animals are raised on a grain-based diets.

Americans also are seeing the tightest supply of wheat since 1946, and soybean supplies also are uncommonly low. Although there is by no means a shortage, the situation could become problematic if weather patterns make for poor crops in the coming seasons.

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GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS
  Silent tsunami
View images of the global food crisis that the World Food Program calls a ‘silent tsunami’

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In addition, because of free trade agreements U.S. food prices and supplies are much more dependent on what’s going on in the rest of the world — a drought in Australia or a weakening of Brazil’s currency.

Food prices are rising, and supplies are tightening, for a number of reasons. These include a growing middle class in the developing world that is buying more food, an increase in the price of fuel used to produce and transport food and a move to plant more crops for ethanol and other biofuels instead of food. Weather also has been a factor, and a weak U.S. dollar has affected the situation.

“If you just take one (of these factors) away, we wouldn’t have this,” said Chris Hurt, agricultural economist with Purdue University. “It’s because these things are happening together.”

The startling rise in food prices has prompted some countries to limit or even ban exports on rice, a mainstay of many poor peoples’ diets. That may have been a factor in last week’s news that Sam’s Club, a division of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., and warehouse club Costco Wholesale Corp. were limiting bulk rice purchases in some stores. Both chains cater to small businesses and restaurants as well as individuals.

The move had many experts scratching their heads, since even with exports bans in some foreign countries there is little concern that Americans won’t be able to find rice on supermarket shelves.

About 90 percent of the rice consumed by Americans is grown here, said Stacy Fitzgerald-Redd, director of communications for the USA Rice Federation, and the domestic rice supply is adequate. The United States also is a major rice exporter, shipping about 50 percent of its rice overseas.

Still, Fitzgerald-Redd conceded that Americans may pay more for rice as a result of the global situation.

“Do I think that rice prices will increase in the United States? That’s certainly a possibility,” she said.

In general, experts expect that tighter food supplies and even food price spikes should even out over the next few years as higher prices prompt farmers to plant more of the needed crops.

“We would have to really have some pretty severe droughts, you know, sequentially, in order to get into a situation where we could technically have a food shortage,” said John Kruse, managing director of the agriculture group for Global Insight.

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