Pensamentos líquidos 83

Sobre o preço dos cereais

«In Haiti, protesters chanting “We’re hungry” forced the prime minister to resign; 24 people were killed in riots in Cameroon; Egypt’s president ordered the army to start baking bread; the Philippines made hoarding rice punishable by life imprisonment.
(…)
The prices mainly reflect changes in demand – not problems of supply, such as harvest failure. The changes include the gentle upward pressure from people in China and India eating more grain and meat as they grow rich and the sudden voracious appetites of western biofuels, which convert cereals into fuel. This year the share of the maize (corn) crop going into ethanol in America has risen and the European Union is implementing its own biofuels targets. To make matters worse, more febrile behaviour seems to be influencing markets: export quotas by large grain producers, money from hedge funds looking for new markets.
(…)
Usually, a food crisis is clear and localised. The harvest fails, often because of war or strife, and the burden in the affected region falls heavily on the poorest. This crisis is different. It is occurring in many countries simultaneously, the first time that has happened since the early 1970s. And it is affecting people usually not hit by famines.
(…)
But by almost any measure, the human suffering is likely to be vast. In El Salvador the poor are eating only half as much food as they were a year ago. Afghans are now appending half their income on food, up from a tenth in 2006.»

From Economist’s briefing “Food and the poor”, April 19th
a

1 comentário:

Anónimo disse...

Se queres mais:

http://www.salon.com/wires/ap/business/2008/04/23/D907S3VO1_wal_mart_rice/index.html#