World Agri Outlook Shows 1.5% Growth, Rising Prices Say OECD, FAO
China Emerges as Food Deficit Consumer
Agricultural production is expected to grow more
slowly over the coming decade, according to the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO). In another report, the FAO noted that government
interventions, such as taxes or subsidies, may be useful in addressing
nutritional needs.
The OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2013-2022,
launched last week, projects the state of global agriculture for the next ten
years. This year’s report found that global production is likely to grow at 1.5
percent annually, on average, compared to 2.1 percent in the preceding decade. The outlook also projects
rising prices for both crop and livestock products over the next ten years, due
to a combination of slower production growth and stronger demand - including
for biofuels.
Additional sources of uncertainty for agricultural
markets include production shortfalls, price volatility, and trade
interruptions, the outlook says. A major drought, combined with low food
stocks, also has the potential to raise crop prices by 15 to 40 percent.
Call for increased investment
Developing countries are expected to take centre
stage on trade and production in farm goods, the agencies said. Emerging
economies will account for the majority of exports of coarse grains, rice,
oilseeds, vegetable oil, sugar, beef, poultry, and fish, while the OECD
countries’ share of trade is expected to continue to decline.
Global sugar production will increase by almost 2 percent each year, primarily from sugar cane in India and
Brazil. Developing countries as a whole are likely to account for 80 percent of the growth in global meat production and for 74 percent of global milk production gains.
To capture a share of these economic benefits,
governments will need to invest in their agricultural sectors to encourage
innovation, increase productivity, and improve integration in global value
chains, the FAO and the OECD found.
Feeding China: domestic challenge, trade
opportunity
The 2013 report places a special focus on China,
given its significance to global production and trade in agriculture. The Asian
economic powerhouse is the world’s largest producer and consumer of certain key
cereals, such as rice and wheat. With an enormous population, changing
appetites, and quick economic growth, the country’s influence in global markets
is expected to continue increasing in the coming decade.
The OECD and FAO found that more food and higher
incomes have cut the number of hungry in China by 100 million since 1990.
However, the Asian giant is also facing problems of water and land scarcity,
leading Beijing to place food security and self-sufficiency at the top of its
policy agenda.
Chinese consumption of farm goods will likely
outpace production by 0.3 percent annually,
potentially creating an opportunity for those looking to export. China is
expected to become the world’s leading consumer of pigmeat
on a per capita basis and account for 59 percent of
global oilseed imports by 2022.
Government intervention can improve nutrition, FAO
says
In a separate report also released last week, the
FAO found that malnutrition is posing major social and economic costs on
countries at every income level. The 2013 edition of the State of Food and
Agriculture report finds, for instance, that productivity loss and direct
healthcare costs as a result of malnutrition could account for up to five percent of global gross domestic product (GDP), equivalent
to US$3.5 trillion per year or US$500 per person.
This cost can justify government intervention in
food markets through nutrition-specific food price subsidies and taxes, the FAO
says, as part of a series of recommendations. Price subsidies, for instance,
could encourage the consumption of more diverse foods such as fruits and
vegetables. Taxes, meanwhile, could discourage the consumption of less
nutritious food.