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Ponce
9th September 2010, 09:08 PM
Similar to another article published about three weeks ago........but worse.
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Doomsday Scenario: Food Prices to Shoot Through the Roof.

30.08.2010
Doomsday Scenario: Food Prices to Shoot Through the RoofThe worst weather on record coupled with the practice of speculation in the commodities markets are set to send food prices skyrocketing, bringing misery and starvation to large swathes of the world’s population. Are we set to see food riots this winter? ]

In the USA, Walmart has already announced a price hike of 5.8% on average for a 31-item basic basket for this Autumn. The long-term rise, however, is far more frightening, with the UNO predicting an increase of 60 per cent by 2030.

What is happening?

When there is a massive price spike, such as the case in recent years, followed by more price rises (as is the case today) the markets panic and speculative buying sends the prices through the roof. The market economy system is indeed not all about supply and demand but is also, and fundamentally, fuelled by speculative trading, with spot buyers buying future positions of commodities. When they are scarce, and the more so when the market senses that a scarcity exists, the price goes up.

This is what is happening today. September corn is up by 3.6% a bushel, wheat by 34 cents. In July the price of wheat shot up by the highest quantity in the last 50 years: 42 per cent. This in turn will push up prices of pasta, bread and cereals in the near future.

Prices set to rise for 12 to 18 months

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SharePrint version Font Size Send to friend Analysts predict upward trends in wheat, corn, soybeans, bean oil and bean meal and the general feeling is a continued rising trend over the next 12 to 18 months. As usual, no mechanisms have been activated to protect the world’s poorer populations from the dramatic effects of supply issues and the resulting speculation in prices.

Global production downturn

Russia reports a drop in production of around 20 per cent due to dry weather conditions. Drought has also affected Ukraine (where maximum production is set to reach just 66% of domestic demand) and Kazakhstan, while floods have affected 13 million acres of cereals in Canada and have wiped out a large part of China’s harvest. Germany’s wheat production is ten to twenty per cent down on 2009; in Argentina dry conditions mean that only 80% of the arable land for cereals has been planted.

The S word: Speculation

In today’s market economy system, what drives the prices is not only supply and demand but also the S word: Speculation, where a handful of players push prices sky high and way beyond the reaches of the pockets of the average consumer. If the system were based upon supply and demand then the price of soybean would be bearish (top-down attack, falling), because the main producers (Brazil, Argentina and the USA), have had a good harvest. Then why is the price of soybean bullish (bottom-up attack, rising)?

Because cash premiums are forcing the soybean futures rates higher as a process of over-consumption of soybean is noticed in the marketplace (soybean is present these days in most foodstuffs and other consumable items). So much so, that the price of soybean would have to rise a further 50 to 80% to curb the current demand.

And it makes sense for this to happen…and that is going to affect the price of everything we eat.

Couple this with the rising cost of transportation (crude and natural gas prices are set to rise from September) and we see our comfortable little monetarist-oriented market economy system has engendered another fine crisis looming on the horizon. Watch this space.

Vast swathes of the planet are set to go hungry. Those who were previously hungry may starve. It is the Doomsday Scenario and it is upon us. And it is caused not by the lack of supply or scarcity of abundance. It is caused by this manic, inhumane system, the S-word, Speculation.

platinumdude
9th September 2010, 09:17 PM
No more dollar menu

http://business.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474978501753

SF McDonald's Takes Away Dollar Menu - Homeless are Outraged



A Mcdonald's in California has done away with its popular dollar value menu, saying that it was struggling for cash and losing a lot of money on the dollar items. But the homeless people of San Fransisco think that the McDonald's is trying to drive away a part of its customer base.

The restaurant in Haight-Ashbury, has raised the price of its dollar items to $1.49. It may not seem like much, but for the homeless in the area, its a price that they just can't pay.

Homeless people around the country depend on the dollar menu for their food. Without the dollar menu, many people are forced to dig in the trash. SF Gate reports that police officers now come by and tell the people loitering around the store that they either need to buy something or leave. Since most cant afford the new prices, they are forced to go somewhere else.

Natalie Gonzales, the owner of the franchise, says that her decision to raise prices had nothing to do with the homeless people that frequented her store.

The price increase is not a national trend across America. Individual stores can raise or lower prices depending on customer demand. The homeless people in Haight-Ashbury may not be able to get a dollar cheeseburger, but if they walk a few blocks down the street, they might be able too.

FunnyMoney
9th September 2010, 09:36 PM
....with the UNO predicting an increase of 60 per cent by 2030.



They actually believe that things hold together that well for that long? I don't think so. A 60% rise will be here a lot sooner than that.