Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
There's (Always) Money In Food
Finweek English
|16 September 2021
Food prices are accelerating in South Africa and across the planet. finweek looks at SA’s listed food producer sector to gauge how they’re performing amid rising food prices.
People must eat. Considering Maslow’s hierarchy of human needs, food, water, warmth, rest, security and safety are the basic needs of humans that require fulfilment. Money is ordinarily made when a need and a solution meet each other and the acquiring party values the solution enough to transfer cash for it.
Food, as opposed to water, is not a public good in SA and is produced according to market principles. It is a big industry. In terms of Stats SA’s basket to measure the consumer price index, food is the second-largest component after housing (another base need), comprising 15.48%.
And food prices have been accelerating locally. In December last year, the rate at which food prices (at the consumer level) increased reached double the speed of headline inflation, 6.2% compared with 3.1%. Since March this year, consumer-level food price inflation has remained above 6% annually (see graph 1). Worryingly, food price inflation at the farm gate has remained elevated above 6% per year since October last year.
Global grain scenario
So, why are food prices accelerating? Grains, which form the bulk of world food production, can explain this the best. World grain stocks (which includes wheat, coarse grains and rice) has been in decline for three years in a row with a moderate increase of 0.3% forecast for 2021/2022, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). The world is forecast to produce 785.8m tonnes of wheat in 2021/2022 (or an increase of 1.4% from the previous marketing year), 1.516bn tonnes of coarse grains (which include maize, barley and sorghum and indicates a 2.5% production increase), and 519m tonnes of rice (1% increase), according to the FAO’s Food Outlook published in June.
Bu hikaye Finweek English dergisinin 16 September 2021 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Finweek English'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Finweek English
THE HEALTH OF SA'S MEDICAL SCHEMES
As the Covid-19 pandemic abates, finweek takes a look at the financial performance of some of the largest players.
7 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
The effect of Gilbertson's departure
With Ntsimbintle Holdings now the major shareholder of Jupiter Mines, it could change SA’s manganese industry.
3 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
Making money from music
Why investors are increasingly drawn to the music industry.
3 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
Conviction is key
Sandy Rheeder plays a critical role in Mukuru’s mission to open up financial services to the emerging consumer market in Africa through tailor-made technology solutions and platforms.
5 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
The post-pandemic toolkit
How CFOs can use technology to support growth.
4 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
Big city living exodus
Mini cities like Waterfall City and Steyn City are redefining city-style apartment living.
3 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
Big compact, big value
Handsome, with a hefty level of standard specification, the roomy Haval Jolion compact crossover is a great value proposition.
3 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
On barriers to entry
There are various ways in which a company or sector can achieve competitive dominance. They usually make for good investments.
2 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
Fear and greed in one index
To buck the trend, when markets are hot or cold, is a tough thing to do. However, it can deliver solid returns.
3 mins
5 November 2021
Finweek English
Africa's largest data centre facility coming soon
Vantage Data Centers plans to invest over R15bn for its first African data centre facility in Attacq’s Waterfall City.
3 mins
5 November 2021
Translate
Change font size

