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IMF Nations Discuss 'Significant Risks' Of Rising Global Food Prices

Food Prices

First Posted: 04/17/11 11:42 AM ET Updated: 06/17/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton and Isabel Versiani) - International Monetary Fund member countries sought to bridge sharp differences over the global economy, acknowledging that rising inflation in emerging markets poses a risk to rich countries too.

Addressing one of their biggest challenges, the 187 IMF nations on Saturday recognized the alarm among developing countries about huge inflows of speculative cash that are stoking their growth but also their inflation rates.

"When inflation goes up in emerging markets, it's not just an emerging market problem, it's a global inflation and possibly interest rate problem," said Singapore Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, who chairs the IMF's steering committee.

Top finance officials, in Washington for a twice-yearly meeting of the IMF, argued over the dangers posed by high government debt and super-low interest rates in sluggish, rich countries and the risk of overheating in developing economies.

"It's one of the most difficult policy moments, one of the most complex challenges I've ever seen, certainly in my lifetime," Angel Gurria, head of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, told Reuters.

The increased focus on the pitfalls in the policies of wealthy nations is part of a shift at the IMF to be more attentive to increasingly influential emerging powers.

Countries such as Brazil have struggled to cope with waves of yield-chasing "hot money" which pushes up inflation.

World Bank President Robert Zoellick called rising food prices "the biggest threat to the world's poor."

The World Bank estimates another 10 percent rise in the food price index could add 10 million more people to the 44 million already thrust into poverty over the last year.

"We risk losing a generation," Zoellick said.

Aware of stiff opposition in some emerging countries to any limits on how they manage the inflows that drive up prices, IMF members said the policies that lead investors to chase higher returns in other emerging economies also need oversight.

Tharman said inflation in the developing world, if unchecked, could spread to rich economies already shouldering large deficits. That would push up borrowing costs and threaten the recovery from the worst global recession in decades.

"We have learned from painful experience in the last few years that nothing is isolated and that risk in one region.... rapidly gets transmitted to the rest of the world," he said.

The IMF committee said the global economy was strengthening but that policy action was needed given "significant risks."

It also sought proposals to strengthen IMF surveillance of "countries that pose the largest systemic risks."

The Group of 20 developed and emerging economies on Friday delayed a decision on contentious guidelines for when countries may use capital controls.

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said "it seems vital to have a common set of rules."

France chairs the G20 this year and is seeking a deal on capital controls in time for a G20 leaders summit in November.

The G20 did agree on Friday to a plan that could put more pressure on the United States to fix its deficits as well as push other leading economies, including China, to address their own shortcomings.

Gurria said "sometime in the fall or this time next year, maybe inflation will have a higher profile" in G20 talks.

IMF SHIFT ON CAPITAL CONTROLS

The IMF this month endorsed use of capital controls, once considered anathema to its free-market philosophy. Advanced countries want to establish a framework to monitor their use, an approach emerging markets oppose.

"Ironically, some of the countries that are responsible for the deepest crisis since the Great Depression and have yet to solve their own problems are eager to prescribe codes of conduct to the rest of the world," Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega said.

Brazil, with one of world's highest official interest rates at 11.75 percent, is among the countries that have used taxes and other measures to curb inflows. But rate hikes designed to cool growth end up attracting still more money from abroad.

U.S. and other rich countries have long argued that emerging countries can combat inflows and price pressures by allowing their currencies to strengthen against the dollar.

China, the world's biggest exporter, has rebuffed acute U.S. pressure to let the yuan rise more rapidly, though Premier Wen Jiabao this week said the country should resort to more exchange rate flexibility to combat rapidly rising prices.

Consumer price increases accelerated in both China and India in the year to March.

GETTING FISCAL HOUSES IN ORDER

Some finance officials said ultra-loose monetary policies and rising budget deficits in the United States and other advanced countries posed the main threat to global recovery.

"The fiscal situation in the advanced economies gives us great concern, and it is in this area that we see the major risks to the global economy," said Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin.

The IMF this week noted that the U.S. budget gap was on course to hit 10.8 percent of economic output this year, tying Ireland for the highest ratio of deficit to total output among advanced economies. It urged Washington to tighten its belt.

At Saturday's meeting, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the United States was "committed to fiscal reforms that will restrain spending and reduce deficits while not threatening the economic recovery."

Leaders also fretted about fiscally strapped euro zone countries and their ability to refinance their massive debts.

(Reporting by Reuters IMF/G20 team; Writing by Steven C. Johnson; Editing by William Schomberg and Leslie Adler)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton and Isabel Versiani) - International Monetary Fund member countries sought to bridge sharp differences over the global economy, acknowledging that rising inflation in em...
WASHINGTON (Lesley Wroughton and Isabel Versiani) - International Monetary Fund member countries sought to bridge sharp differences over the global economy, acknowledging that rising inflation in em...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
11:43 AM on 04/18/2011
Commodities speculation has already driven famine on a global basis.  The coming crunch is no different that what's been experienced.

The lack of controls, the lack of regulation on Commodity markets is the problem.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:12 AM on 04/18/2011
"....high government debt and super-low interest rates...." Sound familiar?
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intolleft
ObamaCare...getting you shovel ready
09:07 AM on 04/18/2011
Somewhere there is a part time talk show host that has been right all along.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
06:10 AM on 04/18/2011
People should learn to grow their own food. It could be grown anywhere using LED lights with solar and wind energy and recycled water indoors for little cost.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:14 AM on 04/18/2011
Too many cannot grow their own food - cost of seed, cost of fertilizer, equipment and/or tools needed, no solar or wind energy generated in their area, can't use gray water (laws against it).
07:41 PM on 04/18/2011
You do not seem to have much experience with hardship. Laziness and fatalism does not lead to success in anything. There are people I have known that would have starved if they did not have their gardens and backyard orchards.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
10:40 AM on 04/19/2011
Do some research. You can compost so you don't need fertilizer, you can collect your own seeds (unless you contract with a GMO company), you can minimize water use. Check out square foot gardening.
10:15 AM on 04/18/2011
Ask the people of Bolivia what happened to their water costs when their government allowed their water to be bought and "owned" by private interests. When their rates went to 25% of their incomes and they could not pay, their homes and land were taken from them (until they revolted and ran the water execs out of the country---but not before some were shot down in cold blood while protesting)

Afford to grow food?

Not unless towns and cities hold onto their water and keep that in public control and unfortunately, huge corporations are all over the US and the rest of the world trying to ""own" public water supplies. Check out your own water supply and keep an eye on what's happening.

Water is worth more than oil. The US has over 25% of the world's water. If our economy is successfully demolished, these companies are probably betting cities and towns will sell that water off in short sighted desperation with the people having no clue what is in store for them.

We're a major target for the privatization of a natural, god-given resource that falls from the heavens---a resource that we require to survive, thrive and grow food.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lolie Culley
02:56 PM on 04/18/2011
Big Corporations are now all over the world even to the smallest country we know. RICH ARE NOW THE MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE AND CONTROLLING EVERYTHING WE GOT.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeyJaii
Socialism.
03:31 AM on 04/18/2011
Farmers can produce a lot more than they are now. They're just trying to gain, gain, gain!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NessEliot1932
Tax Fraud at 94% since we cannot Prosecute
01:39 AM on 04/18/2011
YES - SINCE THE FED + IMF + BANKSTER SPECULATORS HAVE BEEN JACKING TYHE PRICES SINCE JUNE 2010!

CROOKS!
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intolleft
ObamaCare...getting you shovel ready
09:07 AM on 04/18/2011
2010? Certain individuals have been warning about this for years now. Instead of listening, some chose to mock said individual.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Trustfunded1
11:46 PM on 04/17/2011
Raise the debt ceiling and keep Ben printing to hold up the markets.

It's one way to kill of the worlds poor.
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
10:44 PM on 04/17/2011
Pretty funny. People still think inflation is bad. It is actually only bad for the wealthy. The rest of us end up paying less, as we all owe $40k to the national debt. Infation makes the value of that debt lower without having to talk about debt cancelation with the debt holders taking a deduction. You can tell, it's tax season.
03:05 AM on 04/18/2011
What world do you live in? Inflation is bad for everybody not just the wealthy but is MUCH MUCH worse for the working class. Someone worth $10MM can still afford to retire if the dollar looses half of it's value. Someone with 200K in 401k cannot......
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SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
09:23 PM on 04/17/2011
What would life without DieBold be like?
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stape45
Spin this!
09:42 PM on 04/17/2011
The term, "democracy" comes to mind.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
J T K
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
03:09 AM on 04/18/2011
Definitely faved.

To quote Churchil, "It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried."
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SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
09:22 PM on 04/17/2011
Life is a lottery, played by the IMF rules, European men and others that dance to their tune.
I want Jimmy Carter back! A leader of people for justice and someone that can relate to the human plight, cause and effect.
KIampfbeobachter
Misanthropic economic and political shaman
08:14 PM on 04/17/2011
A month or so ago we had the same discussion here on HuffPo. Let me repeat:
It is unlikely that the world will be able to repeat the "green revolution" (a doubling of the yields per area within ten years or so) a second time.
The world population has doubled since than and
The arable land has decreased (disappeared under asphalt) and through soil erosion.
Water becomes increasingly a problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bllnsinchnge
peace, markets, freedom
07:49 PM on 04/17/2011
"Some finance officials said ultra-loose monetary policies and rising budget deficits in the United States and other advanced countries posed the main threat to global recovery'---"

No way, really? How about just a threat, period.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
06:53 PM on 04/17/2011
     If crops should fail in the midwest,  prices will go so high that millions will go hungry in our own nation.  Why?  The Feds are destroying our currency.  Our food reserves will be sold to more affluent nations.  What folly and treason is being committed against the American people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bllnsinchnge
peace, markets, freedom
07:50 PM on 04/17/2011
Pretty close, it would need another dustbowl. It definitely would be a different diet for a few seasons.
Wupta
Parent
06:09 PM on 04/17/2011
The rise in food prices is not related to supplies. The supplies are fine, it is the devaluation of the $ and speculation. The derivatives markets where food a commodity whose futures are traded is pushing the price up. Hedge funds etc, realize that betting on food is a pretty good spot to put your money in, and the money they put in is large enough to effect markets.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
repugnicansfearme
Here endeth the lesson.
04:26 PM on 04/17/2011
Man! There's more cucumbers there than Nancy Reagan's White House dresser drawer!!!