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Global food prices declined from 2022
 
ROME (AP) – Global prices for food commodities like grain and vegetable oil fell last year from record highs in 2022, when Russia’s war in Ukraine, drought and other factors helped worsen hunger worldwide, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization said.
The FAO Food Price Index, which tracks monthly changes in the international prices of commonly traded food commodities, was 13.7 percent lower last year than the 2022 average, but its measures of sugar and rice prices grew in that time.
Last month, the index dropped some 10 percent compared with December 2022. The drop in food commodity prices in 2023 comes despite a difficult year for food security around the world.
Climate effects like dry weather, flooding and the naturally occurring El Niño phenomenon, combined with fallout from conflicts like the war in Ukraine, bans on food trade that have added to food inflation, and weaker currencies have hurt developing nations especially.
While food commodities like grain have fallen from painful surges in 2022, the relief often hasn’t made it to the real world of shopkeepers, street vendors and families trying to make ends meet.
More than 333 million people faced acute levels of food insecurity in 2023, according to another U.N. agency, the World Food Program.
Rice and sugar in particular were problematic last year because of climate effects in growing regions of Asia, and prices have risen in response, especially in African nations.
With the exception of rice, the FAO’s grain index last year was 15.4 percent below the 2022 average, “reflecting well supplied global markets.” That’s despite Russia pulling out of a wartime deal that allowed grain to flow from Ukraine to countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.
Countries buying wheat have found supply elsewhere, notably from Russia, with prices lower than they were before the war began, analysts said.
The FAO’s rice index was up 21 percent last year because of India’s export restrictions on some types of rice and concerns about the impact of El Niño on rice production. That has meant higher prices for low-income families, including places like Senegal and Kenya.
Similarly, the agency’s sugar index last year hit its highest level since 2011, expanding 26.7 percent from 2022 because of concerns about low supplies. That followed unusually dry weather damaging harvests in India and Thailand, the world’s second- and third-largest exporters.

1/15/2024