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Food price inflation continues to pose significant challenges across low- and middle-income countries, with the latest data from September to December 2024 revealing concerning trends. According to the World Bank, 72.2% of low-income countries are experiencing food price inflation exceeding 5%, an increase of 3.4 percentage points since December 13, 2024. Similarly, food price inflation has risen in 38% of upper-middle-income countries (up 5 percentage points) and 7.4% of high-income countries (up 3.5 percentage points). Although inflation in lower-middle-income countries decreased by 3.2 percentage points, it remains a persistent issue.
Alarmingly, food price inflation continues to outpace overall inflation in 43.5% of the 161 countries analyzed, placing additional pressure on already vulnerable populations.
Commodity Price Trends Highlight Uneven Impacts
Global agricultural, cereal, and export price indices have risen by 3% to 4% since the previous update, with maize prices showing the sharpest increase, closing 9% higher. On a year-over-year basis, maize prices are 2% higher, while wheat and rice prices are down 10% and 16%, respectively. However, since January 2020, maize prices have surged 24%, and rice prices have spiked by 26%, underscoring the long-term volatility in global food markets.
FAO Report Explores the Role of Food Trade in Nutrition
The FAO’s “State of Agricultural Commodity Markets 2024” report highlights the complex relationship between global food trade, diets, and nutrition. While trade plays a vital role in stabilizing food supplies and prices by moving food from surplus to deficit regions, the report raises concerns about its unintended consequences. These include the depletion of natural resources, increased inequality among resource-poor farmers, and the proliferation of energy-dense, low-nutrition foods that can worsen dietary outcomes.
As food price inflation continues to strain global food systems, the World Bank and its partners emphasize the urgent need for sustainable trade practices and policies to ensure equitable access to affordable and nutritious food, particularly in the most vulnerable regions.
SOURCE >WORLD BANK