The food crises
An edition of The food crises (2011)
a quantitative model of food prices including speculators and ethanol conversion
By Marco Lagi
Publish Date
2011
Publisher
New England Complex Systems Institute
Language
eng
Pages
56
Description:
"Recent increases in basic food prices are severely impacting vulnerable populations worldwide. Proposed causes such as shortages of grain due to adverse weather, increasing meat consumption in China and India, conversion of corn to ethanol in the US, and investor speculation on commodity markets lead to widely differing implications for policy. A lack of clarity about which factors are responsible reinforces policy inaction. Here, for the first time, we construct a dynamic model that quantitatively agrees with food prices. The results show that the dominant causes of price increases are investor speculation and ethanol conversion. Models that just treat supply and demand are not consistent with the actual price dynamics. The two sharp peaks in 2007/2008 and 2010/2011 are specifically due to investor speculation, while an underlying upward trend is due to increasing demand from ethanol conversion.".
subjects: Food prices, Agriculture, Mathematical models, Food supply, Ethanol as fuel