Showing posts with label Food Prices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Prices. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

The secret report about food prices?

A note on rising food prices;
Summary: The rapid rise in food prices has been a burden on the poor in developing countries, who spend roughly half of their household incomes on food. This paper examines the factors behind the rapid increase in internationally traded food prices since 2002 and estimates the contribution of various factors such as the increased production of biofuels from food grains and oilseeds, the weak dollar, and the increase in food production costs due to higher energy prices. It concludes that the most important factor was the large increase in biofuels production in the U.S. and the EU. Without these increases, global wheat and maize stocks would not have declined appreciably, oilseed prices would not have tripled, and price increases due to other factors, such as droughts, would have been more moderate. Recent export bans and speculative activities would probably not have occurred because they were largely responses to rising prices. While it is difficult to compare the results of this study with those of other studies due to differences in methodologies, time periods and prices considered, many other studies have also recognized biofuels production as a major driver of food prices. The contribution of biofuels to the rise in food prices raises an important policy issue, since much of the increase was due to EU and U.S. government policies that provided incentives to biofuels production, and biofuels policies which subsidize production need to be reconsidered in light of their impact on food prices.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Podcasts

World Bank's Ravallion Sees Growth Constraints in Africa
and admiration for China

Frankel Says Euro May Replace Dollar as Reserve Currency

Doug Rivers on polling

The Pirate's Dilemma

Modern miracles; a history of medicine

The story of highways

History of the Popes


The Wisdom of Water
The popular advocate and water expert, John Archer, has turned his attention to the waters that flow through almost all the spiritual traditions of the world. From clouds and rivers and rainbows, to dew-drops and thunder, water is a universal and ancient motif in religion

The great grammar debate
Is learning formal grammar essential to becoming a good writer and communicator? Or is it more important to develop a feeling for language that can be applied in different contexts?

The late great physicist Richard Feynman

The expressive side of the face

60% of people turn their head when asked to pose for a portrait. A prime example is that of Mona Lisa. So why does this bias exist? When people try to express emotion, they turn the left side of the face

Can science teach us anything about morality?

Speed cleaning for your soul

Central banks ‘key’ to stop recession
Economist Professor Stephen Nickell, a former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee and one of this year’s honorary graduates at Warwick, says the UK could see a severe recession but that will depend on the action of the Bank of England and other central banks around the world

McMafia: A journey through the criminal underworld

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Development Econ Talks

Will China and India be Able to Sustain High Growth?

Commission on Growth and Development: Ideas Informing Actors

Equality of Opportunity in Latin America and the Carribean

The Political Economy of Inequality: Implications for Inclusive Growth

Increase in Food and Fuel Prices—Seminar on Macroeconomic Impact, and Policy Responses

Most boring development blog award

The award goes to Povert & Growth blog of the World Bank.

One suggestion to make it interesting- comment about the following 'secret World Bank report'?

Secret report: biofuel caused food crisis;
Biofuels have forced global food prices up by 75% - far more than previously estimated - according to a confidential World Bank report obtained by the Guardian.

The damning unpublished assessment is based on the most detailed analysis of the crisis so far, carried out by an internationally-respected economist at global financial body.

The figure emphatically contradicts the US government's claims that plant-derived fuels contribute less than 3% to food-price rises. It will add to pressure on governments in Washington and across Europe, which have turned to plant-derived fuels to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and reduce their dependence on imported oil.

Senior development sources believe the report, completed in April, has not been published to avoid embarrassing President George Bush.

"It would put the World Bank in a political hot-spot with the White House," said one yesterday.

Headline of the Day


World leaders enjoy 18-course banquet as they discuss how to solve global food crisis

The following headline appears too suspicious-
G8 says committed to fulfilling Africa aid pledge

Related;The G8 on Africa and development

IMF and World Bank compete for attention;
Export Restrictions Hamper Humanitarian Response, Zoellick Says
Price Surge Driving Some Countries Close to Tipping Point—IMF

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Jagdish Bhagwati on Food Prices

Jagdish Bhagwati on Food Prices;



Bhagwati and Sachs on the food crisis

Malthus is Back


World Food Outlook

World could face severe economic downturn, new UN report suggests

Tea- Fact of the Day

World tea production continued to grow in 2006. The annual growth rate was more than 3 % to reach an estimated 3.6 million tonnes. The expansion was mainly due to record crops in China, Viet Nam and India.

The very latest figures put world black tea production at 2.5 million tonnes as compared to 968 000 tonnes for green tea. FAO projections to 2017 indicate that world green tea production is expected to grow at a considerably faster rate than black tea, 4.5 % annually compared to 1.9 % for black tea. The projections reflect the growth in China where the programme for production expansion through rehabilitation, replanting and some conversion is expected to continue to 2017.

The level of world tea consumption in 2006 was roughly equal to production. But its growth rate was only one percent, a slowdown from the annual average of 2.7 % growth over the previous decade. Per capita consumption in the major tea producing countries lags behind, in spite of their strong economic growth. Russians consume 1.26 kg per year and the British 2.2 kg per year but in India tea consumption is only 0.65 kg per head per year and in China it is only 0.53 kg per year.

-Intergovernmental meeting on tea

Friday, May 16, 2008

The Perfect Storm


Safia Ali, mother of five, has not eaten in seven days. Her 1-year old son, Farhan, has fallen ill.

The consensus now is that all the same elements of the early 1990s — high-intensity conflict, widespread displacement and drought — are lining up again, and at a time of the biggest spike in global food prices in more than 30 years. The United Nations says 2.6 million Somalis need assistance and the number could soon swell to 3.5 million, nearly half the estimated population. If there is excellent rain or a sudden peace, the crisis may ease. But weather projections and even the rosiest political forecasts do not predict that.

-Famine Looms as Wars Rend Horn of Africa

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

How Judges Think

Richard Posner Sees Need for More `Candid' U.S. Supreme Court
U.S. Circuit Judge Richard Posner talks with Bloomberg's Tom Keene from Chicago about his new book, "How Judges Think," the U.S. Supreme Court, and the impact of ethanol production on food supply and prices.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Assorted

World Bank Scorpions;
Also on Monday, the bank announced the retirement of Praful Patel, its vice president for the South Asia region. This was ahead of the mandatory retirement age of 62 but for the credibility of the bank not a moment too soon. Mr. Patel is the man who presided over $570 million in corrupted World Bank health-sector projects in India, which we first reported on in January1. President Robert Zoellick would have sent a stronger signal that such performance won't be tolerated had he fired Mr. Patel outright rather than allowing him to slink out the back door. But at the World Bank, the main deeds that are punished are good ones.


The financial crises of capitalism
By Samuel Brittan

The Economics of Pirate Tolerance


The Nordic Model: Solutions for Continental Europe's Problems?

Growth Diagnostics for South Africa

A visual Strunk and White

When Should the Fed Crash the Party?

The historical roots of India’s booming service economy

Taxing gambling: Some precedents

Is the Fed on a Bender?

"Lessons from the Great Depression"

Anyone notice a problem here?

What if we'd been on the gold standard?

What happened to global food prices?

A Sports Numbers Reading List

Some of the world's earliest democracies flourished aboard pirate ships