Food prices in 2021 have increased to their highest levels in six years. According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), which publishes the Food Price Index each month, food prices in January marked the sharpest month-over-month and year-over-year rise in a decade. In total, global food prices rose more than 30% from the trough in May 2020 to April 2021. These trends point towards what could be the onset of food inflation, or so-called "agflation".

What Is Causing Agflation?

The most significant factors driving the global rally in food prices have come from China, which first started seeing localized food inflation in 2019. During that year, African swine fever decimated China’s hog herd, which is the world’s largest, causing an 11 million ton pork deficit. Then, in 2020, the country's poor harvest -- caused by severe flooding in the southern region and droughts in the west -- compounded the already dire situation for the country's roughly 26 million hog farmers who depend on in-country crop production for affordable animal feed. Domestic prices for corn, soybeans, and meat skyrocketed, with some regions of the country experiencing prices rising more than 50%.

With the support of government subsidies, Chinese hog farmers have acted aggressively to rebuild their herds. To meet the mounting demand, China has begun an aggressive agricultural import program in an effort to pare domestic food prices and rebuild its strategic reserves.

US Agricultural Exports

Source: USDA Foreign Agricultural Service

Doing Nothing Is Not an Option

The United Nations expects that by 2050 the world’s population will have grown to roughly 10 billion, which is 28% higher than the 7.8 billion people on the planet today.1 Nearly all of this growth will occur in developing countries. Urbanization will continue at an accelerated pace, resulting in approximately 70% of the world's population living in urban areas by 2050, an increase from the roughly 54% today. More people will enter the middle-class than at any time in history, which will have consequences for the global agriculture ecosystem2

There is a significant shortfall between the amount of food the world produces today and the amount that will be needed to feed the population in 2050. To achieve this in an environmentally sustainable way, the agriculture industry must embrace new technologies that generate higher yields using fewer resources. By adopting smarter ways of doing business, the industry has the ability to thwart a worsening food insecurity crisis.

MVIS Global Agribusiness Index

30/06/2020-30/06/2021

Source: MV Index Solutions. Rebased to 1,000. Data as at 30 June 2021. 

1 Source: United Nations, June 17, 2019
2 Source: United Nations, June 17, 2019


About the Author:

Ammar James joined VanEck in 2019. He serves as Analyst for the VanEck Global Resources Strategy, focusing on agribusiness, timber, and paper and packaging. Prior to joining VanEck, Mr. James served as Associate Investment Director at Cambridge Associates performing public and private equity investment manager research in the agriculture, mining, energy, and infrastructure sectors. Prior to this role, he served as Investment Operations Analyst at Cambridge Associates. Mr. James received a BS in Mathematics from the State University of New York at Stony Brook.

The article above is an opinion of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of MV Index Solutions or its affiliates.