PDA

View Full Version : Model on food prices and social unrest predicts crisis in 2013



Scorpio
03-15-2012, 06:49 AM
Model on food prices and social unrest predicts crisis in 2013
Edward Harrison

16342
The people at NECSI sent me the following interesting blurb on the relationship between the rise in food prices and social unrest:

http://SBC.com/foodvideos.html.

These videos illustrate the correlation between increasing costs of food and worldwide food riots, especially from 2000 until the present day. Both prices and riots peaked in 2008 and 2011 after a brief drop in 2009. This month, NECSI is publishing the results of its food prices update, in which the institute extends its food price model to January 2012, entering no modifications to the model and continuing to use its dynamics.

“The food price bubble of 2011 caused widespread hunger and helped trigger the Arab spring. In 2013 we expect prices to be even higher and may lead to major social disruptions.” said Professor Yaneer Bar-Yam President of NECSI, who has just returned from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland where he presented his findings on speculation in global commodity markets. His paper “The Food Crises: A Quantitative Model of Food Prices Including Speculators and Ethanol Conversion” was called one of the top 10 discoveries in science of 2011 by Wired magazine.

According to the new study, the next food price peak will take place in about a year. The results will be dramatically higher prices than we have encountered thus far. The study warns that should ethanol production continue to grow according to multiyear trends, even this underlying trend will reach social-crisis levels in just one year.

NECSI’s latest findings reveal that the model from their 2011 paper still fits food price price trends. Their update reveals one important shift, however, in price trends, which might add to, not reduce, global instability. “The current trend of prices suggests that in the immediate future market prices may become lower than equilibrium,” says the study, “consistent with bubble and crash market oscillations.” The next bubble is expected by the end of 2012.

NECSI’s researchers said the model they have used to examine food prices has proven to be robust and consistent with ongoing behavior of food prices. Bar-Yam, who co-authored last year’s food-price study as well as the latest study update, said that the fit with the FAO Food Price Index is still “strikingly quantitatively accurate, validating both the descriptive and predictive abilities of the model.

”To extend NECSI’s earlier model ten months out and still witness a fit is important,” he added. “This means we have validated it for data that was not around when we first made the model. It predicted the burst of the 2011 food bubble at the exact time it happened, when many were saying that high food prices were there to stay. Success in predictive validation is remarkable. The conclusions are reinforced greatly that high food prices are due to ethanol and speculators–with all the relevant policy implications.”

“The current equilibrium value is about 50% higher than the prices prior to the impact of the ethanol shock. And the projected time until the next food price bubble is about a year.” The results will be dramatically higher prices than encountered thus far.

As I commented before the Arab Spring:

The rise in food and energy prices should be taken into consideration by government officials conducting pro-inflationary policies. What should be of concern regarding commodity price inflation is how it represents a regressive tax on lower income workers and consumers in emerging markets and developing countries. Lower income consumers spend a much greater percentage of income on food and energy. So when commodity prices increase, it has a disproportionate effect on them. One reason we saw food riots in emerging markets in 2008 has much to do with this.

-On Food Price Inflation, Nov 2010

I don’t think things are any different now. I should add that emerging markets central banks were pushed to tighten in 2010 because of rising food prices and this has created a negative growth dynamic in countries like Brazil and India as high interest rates have combined with inflation to suppress demand growth. In Brazil’s case, the currency has also created even more problems.

If the NECSI’s models have any predictive value, policy makers in the developed economies addicted to easy money to cure the indebtedness in the private sector should take note because their policies can have unintended consequences as negative real yields bite and private portfolio preferences shift and drive up commodity prices.

As NECSI puts it in:

Our analysis shows that dominant causes of price increases are investor speculation and corn to 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. The model includes investor trend following, as well as shifting assets between commodities, equities and bonds to take advantage of increased expected returns.

Source: UPDATE 2012 — The Food Crisis: Predictive Validation of a Quantitative Model of Food Prices Including Speculation and Ethanol Conversion

www.creditwritedowns.com

http://www.silverbearcafe.com/private/03.12/socialunrest.html

Nickelless
03-15-2012, 07:09 AM
At least it can't happen here. :sarc:

Thanks for the article, Scorp.

Mr Paradise
03-15-2012, 10:16 AM
When the time is right Obama will turn water into wine.

GOLD DUCK
03-15-2012, 11:22 AM
When the time is right Obama will turn water into wine.

QWAK,Miracals are just things that happen and are AMASING and can't easealy be explained by the viewing public!:idea:

What you can EXPECT is that Obama will drink WATER and then take a PISS :pissr: and by Presidential order declare it to LEGALY be "MONKEY WINE" :hahaha::party9: and the HEALTH CARE industry will AGREE :yes: and state all the ways it is GOOD and in the public intrist to DRINK IT! :alberteinstein:

Just another variation of what Ragon did with the "TRICKLE DOWN EFFECT" BS --- convinced people it was RAINING! :alberteinstein:

the DUCK :2:

CiscoKid
03-15-2012, 01:45 PM
I'm selling all my metals and going all-in with pink slime. :banana:

budfox
03-15-2012, 01:58 PM
I'm selling all my metals and going all-in with pink slime. :banana:

Too late....I've already cornered the market. I got slim out my ass.:bear_blink:

GOLD DUCK
03-15-2012, 02:35 PM
Too late....I've already cornered the market. I got slim out my ass.:bear_blink:

QWAK,budfox,Is it sold under your regestered BRAND NAME so people know it is realy GOOD PINK SLIME? :hmmmm2::banana:

Perhaps you could add some FOOD COLORING so yours is OBVIOUSLY diferent!:idea::thumbs_up:

the DUCK :s9:Y

birddog
03-15-2012, 02:56 PM
We need to change over those corn and wheat fields to grass to feed our cattle. Why grow grains to feed animals when grass will do. Isn't that over complicating things?

Nickelless
03-15-2012, 03:33 PM
When the time is right Obama will turn water into wine.

Obama can't even turn water into pi$$.

ralleia
03-15-2012, 04:03 PM
An underlying theme in this is the use of corn to produce ethanol.

With our petroleum-based agricultural system, and our midwestern states suing each other repeatedly over water rights (which are largely driven by irrigation for agriculture), the fact that ethanol has lower energy than gasoline, and with the U.S. exporting those gasoline products anyhow I cannot see how this anything but criminal.

I have not gotten to the bottom of pulling the thread, otherwise known as follow the money. But something STINKS here, and when the engineering analysis is done I do not anticipate that burning diesel and irrigating fields to produce corn and then burning corn to make ethanol will turn out to be the most advantageous use of our resources.

:508:

northfarmer
03-15-2012, 04:34 PM
The gold food ratio is horribly out of whack,your already getting the cheapest food in the history of man,so suck it up its the farmer getting screwed right now.


http://www.financialsense.com/contributors/ronald-griess/ratio-charts-gold-versus-other-assets

gringott
03-15-2012, 05:41 PM
The gold food ratio is horribly out of whack,your already getting the cheapest food in the history of man,so suck it up its the farmer getting screwed right now.


http://www.financialsense.com/contributors/ronald-griess/ratio-charts-gold-versus-other-assets

It's not good food.
I purchased Hillshire Farms [Sara Lee] Beef Polska Kielbasa. Ingredient 1 Beef Ingredient 2 Water Ingredient 3 Corn Syrup.
Crap.

Wow. My father used to make Kielbasa, he learned from his mother. He didn't dump water and corn syrup in there.
I checked with my wife. She was Polish [Naturalized citizen of USA since 1991]. No way they put corn syrup in there.

Low calorie bread, Sara Lee again. They put wood in there because you can't digest it, passes right through.

I think sawdust is cheaper than grain. So is water and corn syrup cheaper than beef.

That's like dumping 20% water in the gasoline. It'll be cheaper, but not worth a plugged nickel.

Au-myn
03-15-2012, 05:46 PM
When the time is right Obama will turn water into wine.


...:lol04:

CiscoKid
03-16-2012, 07:28 AM
It's not good food.
I purchased Hillshire Farms [Sara Lee] Beef Polska Kielbasa. Ingredient 1 Beef Ingredient 2 Water Ingredient 3 Corn Syrup.
Crap.

Wow. My father used to make Kielbasa, he learned from his mother. He didn't dump water and corn syrup in there.
I checked with my wife. She was Polish [Naturalized citizen of USA since 1991]. No way they put corn syrup in there.

Low calorie bread, Sara Lee again. They put wood in there because you can't digest it, passes right through.

I think sawdust is cheaper than grain. So is water and corn syrup cheaper than beef.

That's like dumping 20% water in the gasoline. It'll be cheaper, but not worth a plugged nickel.

Lots of truth here. This is why I grow my own meat and cook from scratch instead of using processed food products. What has it gained us? We cannot eat out at a restaurant any longer. Our systems can't handle whatever they are serving.

oldgaranddad
03-16-2012, 07:54 AM
I'm selling all my metals and going all-in with pink slime. :banana:

To take liberty with a quote from Soylent Green: "Pink slime is people!"

GodspeedMetals
03-16-2012, 09:23 AM
The gold food ratio is horribly out of whack,your already getting the cheapest food in the history of man,so suck it up its the farmer getting screwed right now.


http://www.financialsense.com/contributors/ronald-griess/ratio-charts-gold-versus-other-assets

I agree a lot of farmers are getting screwed - but many of them made a pact with the devil to grow those gmo seeds, raise mutated animals and spray with god knows what. I have the utmost respect for farmers... heck, I wanna be one. But I can't feel sorry for those people who farm food that's unhealthy to begin with.

When I shop for meat, my farmer charges DOUBLE what I would pay at Wholefoods - but I'm assured it doesn't contain any pink slime in it. Bacon, flap steak, sirloin, skirt, sausages, etc. All double in price compared to supermarkets (to a tee!), for which I'm more than happy to pay, just to make sure I'm getting the real McCoy.

My major concern now is... there is no defense against GMO crops pollinating whole regions of natural non-gmo farms. That scares the ba-jeezus out of me.

Unca Walt
03-16-2012, 10:21 AM
To take liberty with a quote from Soylent Green: "Pink slime is people!"

Dang it! Ya beat me to it.

Soylent Pink.

Gawd... it is here...:afraid:

northfarmer
03-16-2012, 09:46 PM
Farmers?doing wrong and knowing it?

We are not a bunch of scientist's who know one way or the other what is good or bad,and neither are you.

We are an industry just like any other to provide a a high quality product at a low cost,or did the laws of capitalism change?

The farmer is one of the backbone trades men,we will switch and adapt and change and over come in a heart beat.

Look at some of Ron Pauls base.

Rusty Shackelford
03-18-2012, 08:00 PM
All the big farmers in my county are well off. Don't see many getting screwed from my view point. When you pull up subsidies websites and see that a guy that bought 100 acres of tillable ground for $3500 an acre has received almost $750K in subsidies for that farm over the last 8 years on top of the harvest, it is hard to say they are getting screwed.

New trucks, new homes, new equipment every year or two?? Those actions are not typical of folks that are facing financial hard times IMO.