Food Costs Rising Fastest in 17 Years

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ELLEN SIMON | April 14, 2008 04:10 PM EST | AP

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Owner Sam Iliewat stands outside his Wonder Bagels shop in Jersey City, N.J., Monday, April 14, 2008. Iliewat recently posted a letter from the store's wheat supplier to help explain the increases in food prices to his customers. (AP Photo/Max Pasion)

NEW YORK — Steve Tarpin can bake a graham cracker crust in his sleep, but explaining why the price for his Key lime pies went from $20 to $25 required mastering a thornier topic: global economics.

He recently wrote a letter to his customers and posted it near the cash register listing the factors _ dairy prices driven higher by conglomerates buying up milk supplies, heat waves in Europe and California, demand from emerging markets and the weak dollar.

The owner of Steve's Authentic Key Lime Pies in Brooklyn said he didn't want customers thinking he was "jacking up prices because I have a unique product."

"I have to justify it," he said.

The U.S. is wrestling with the worst food inflation in 17 years, and analysts expect new data due on Wednesday to show it's getting worse. That's putting the squeeze on poor families and forcing bakeries, bagel shops and delis to explain price increases to their customers.

U.S. food prices rose 4 percent in 2007, compared with an average 2.5 percent annual rise for the last 15 years, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. And the agency says 2008 could be worse, with a rise of as much as 4.5 percent.

Higher prices for food and energy are again expected to play a leading role in pushing the government's consumer price index higher for March.

Analysts are forecasting that Wednesday's Department of Labor report will show the Consumer Price Index rose at a 4 percent annual rate in the first three months of the year, up from last year's overall rise of 2.8 percent.

For the U.S. poor, any increase in food costs sets up an either-or equation: Give something up to pay for food.

"I was talking to people who make $9 an hour, talking about how they might save $5 a week," said Kathleen DiChiara, president and CEO of the Community FoodBank of New Jersey. "They really felt they couldn't. That was before. Now, they have to."

For some, that means adding an extra cup of water to their soup, watering down their milk, or giving their children soda because it's cheaper than milk, DiChiara said.

U.S. households still spend a smaller chunk of their expenses for foods than in any other country _ 7.2 percent in 2006, according to the USDA. By contrast, the figure was 22 percent in Poland and more than 40 percent in Egypt and Vietnam.

In Bangladesh, economists estimate 30 million of the country's 150 million people could be going hungry. Haiti's prime minister was ousted over the weekend following food riots there.

Still, the higher U.S. prices seem eye-popping after years of low inflation. Eggs cost 25 percent more in February than they did a year ago, according to the USDA. Milk and other dairy products jumped 13 percent, chicken and other poultry nearly 7 percent.

USDA economist Ephraim Leibtag explained the jumps in a recent presentation to the Food Marketing Institute, starting with the factors everyone knows about: sharply higher commodity costs for wheat, corn, soybeans and milk, plus higher energy and transportation costs.

The other reasons are more complex. Rapid economic growth in China and India has increased demand for meat there, and exports of U.S. products, such as corn, have set records as the weak dollar has made them cheaper. That's lowered the supply of corn available for sale in the U.S., raising prices here. Ethanol production has also diverted corn from dinner tables and into fuel tanks.

Soybean prices have gone up as farmers switched more of their acreage to corn. Drought in Australia has even affected the price of bread, as it led to tighter global wheat supplies.

The jump has left people in the food business to do their own explaining. Twin Cafe Caterers in lower Manhattan posted a letter on its deli cooler: "Due to the huge increase of the gas, the electricity, the water and all the other utilities, we had to raise the prices a little bit." It went on to say that all its food prices have risen, too.

Wonder Bagels, in Jersey City, N.J., posted a letter from its wheat supplier, A. Oliveri & Sons, saying the recent situation was unprecedented.

"The major mills across the country are using words like 'rationing' and 'shortages' if things continue," it said. "We will sweat out the summer together, hoping there will be some flour left to purchase at any price."

The letter called for an immediate halt to exports and a change in farm policy, "stop paying farmers NOT to grow crops." A new farm bill, stalled in Congress, would expand farm subsidies if it passes, however.

For some Americans, the resulting increases might be barely perceptible. The Cheesecake Factory raised prices by 1.5 percent at the end of February, Applebee's by 3 percent.

But for the poorest U.S. families, the higher costs may mean going hungry. A family of four is eligible for a maximum $542 a month in food stamps, which never lasted the whole month before, Food Bank of New Jersey's DiChiara said.

"Now food stamps go fewer and fewer days of the month," she said.

The Food Bank recently got a letter of its own from a key vendor. Its grim message: Sorry, but the prices they charge the Food Bank would be increasing 20 percent, due to food inflation.

 
 

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Heckuva job, Bushie. Just in case anybody was thinking there possibly couldn't be anything else that he could screw up catastrophically...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 04/15/2008

I understand very well why the price of food has gone up, but this comment is just stupid:

"For some, that means adding an extra cup of water to their soup, watering down their milk, or giving their children soda because it's cheaper than milk, DiChiara said."

Giving the kiddies soda because milk is too expensive? I guess it wouldn't occur to them to point their kids to the kitchen sink.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 04/15/2008

Hows the water quality in your community? This atrocity is the direct result of the 500% increase in energy over the last seven years. All food products, no matter what they are , are directly impacted by the cost of energy. Economics 101. How long do these greedy bastards think they can shift the balance of wealth so radically before every item produced will have to add the robber price of energy to their bottom line?
Wake up, Rome is Burning!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 PM on 04/15/2008

There were many commenters here a while back slamming everyone who claimed inflation was soaring. Please come back.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 PM on 04/15/2008

1# bag of pinto beans:

$.50 to $.59 in 1 month

Store brand canned tuna:

$.55 to $.69 in 1 month

Box store-brand wheat crackers:
$1 to $1.35 in 1 month

just a few of many

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 04/15/2008

The flip side of crisis is opportunity. If Americans deal with soaring food prices by skipping past the junk food aisle, we might actually get this whole obesity deal under control. It could happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 04/15/2008

Obesity occurs when people are forced to live on starchy, carbohydrate laden foods such as rice, potatoes and pasta. These people cannot afford a protein high diet of meat and fish, etc. and fill up on starch. This crisis will not solve the obesity problem - it will add to it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 PM on 04/15/2008

The simple truth is the Earth can sustain us with a plant-based diet far better than a meat-eating one.
But we seem unwilling to give up eating meat, despite the indefensible massive cruelty and environmental destruction involved. Eating ourselves out of house and home, literally.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 04/15/2008

So you want us to give up meat? Come on, enjoy a nice steak and stop caring what other people eat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 04/15/2008

what edva says makes sense. why are so many meat eaters afraid to even try to quit eating it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 04/15/2008

Because we have the intelligence to realize that we, by nature and biology, are omnivores, and no matter what your PETA propaganda may say, a human being cannot be sustained by a diet that does not contain some animal protein.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:07 PM on 04/15/2008

When I look at the past 7 years, I get the distinct feeling George W. AWOL is trying to destroy the world!
The 'man' could screw up a wet dream!
I can't wait until the AWOL Texan slithers back down to Crawford and we put a real American back in the White House!
...an American ADULT not another slave state child.!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 04/15/2008

Hey,... put the blame where blame is due - Georgie was born in CT, and educated in Ivy-League schools.

He isn't a Texan - he just wants people to think he is. Blame elitism, inbreeding, and a shallow and indulgent upbringing for Georgie.

*for full disclosure - I am not personally a Texan and don't desire to become one*

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 04/15/2008

People starving worldwide as food becames a much bigger portion of everyone' budget.

More oil buried underneath our own lands than the US could ever use, and the greenies riding around on ethanol & feeling good about themselves.

Algore should be in jail, his nonsense, along with the unbelievable gullibility of his sheep, is causing every bit of this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 PM on 04/15/2008

Al Gore should be in the White House, Bush & Cheney should be in jail.

Ethanol has never been touted as a cure for global warming, only as an alternative to fossil fuels.

There is no credible way to support your assertions that environmentalists or environmentalism is the root cause for rising food costs. It's not hard to figure, though, that implementing processes and methodologies which protect the environment are initially more costly than just allowing big corporations to pollute and ravage the planet in the cheapest way possible. It costs more to have your garbage hauled away and composted or recycled than it does to merely dump your trash in your back yard. But when your house becomes unlivable and you run out of dumping space, you'll STILL have to pay somebody to deal with your garbage, IF it's not too late to save the house, IF you can find someone who is willing and able, and IF you can afford it.

The Republican "philosophy" is to live a life of unsustainable excess NOW, because they don't give a damn what happens after they're dead. It's OK for the world to end in nuclear destruction or global environmental collapse, as long as they are the richest anthropoid apes on the planet when the mass extinctions set in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 04/15/2008

Vice President Al Gore maintains that "it"s well known that I"ve always supported ethanol. I have a consistent record of shoring up the farm safety net." Gore, who as vice president cast a tie-breaking vote in 1994 against a proposal Senator Bill Bradley sponsored to cut tax incentives for ethanol fuel, adds that "I have not ducked when votes for ... agricultural interests were on the floor."

Source: Sustainable Energy Coalition, media backgrounder #2 Nov 18, 1999

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 04/15/2008

thank you - al gore was VP for eight years and a senator for who knows how long - and what did he do he when he was in a position to do something/anything about global warming or energy policy? the answer is : nothing

now he is just a joke

or course when he was senator the greenies were worried about global cooling, but that is beside the put...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 04/15/2008

I'd say that's a major mischaracterization. Most of the more environmentally conscious are well aware that attempting to "grow fuel" isn't a solution to the energy problem. They are equally aware of the impacts of the ethanol program (which has never been either cost effective or particularly successful in terms of energy use) for instance on food prices. SImply put, without very major advances in engine technology, trying to produce adequate amounts of energy from agricultural problems is fraught with both economic and moral problems. The true renewables, like hydrogen power and solar, or electric vehicles that are powered through an energy grid based on sustainable energy technology, need to be the technologies that we focus on.

That's not about being "green" it's just common sense.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 04/15/2008

CUT OFF ME OIL

EASY

INTERSTATE--ALL DRIVE 60 MPH ON CRUISE

MPG DRASTIC INCREASE

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 PM on 04/15/2008

You can drive in the left lane, I don't want to drive like an 80 year old woman though.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 04/15/2008

As a country, we are blessed. There is food on the shelves of the market. But it is amazing to me that in a country where some people own multiple homes and have $2,000,000 bar mitzvas for their children that people go to sleep homelss and hungry.

This is where I miss Sen. Edwards the most. Hunger and poverty are huge global issues. They are also huge local issues. Most of us have no idea where our food comes from. Oh John, fair John, where is your voice when we need it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 AM on 04/15/2008

And that is why I miss Senator Edwards as well, Emmagold. Instead we have the media darlings doing us in. Yes, we need John. Badly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:32 PM on 04/15/2008

OK, now let's see? Spiraling food costs, exploitive gas prices, foreclosures abound, families and companies filing bankruptcy, huge layoffs, massive defense industry graft and corruption, massive financial industry write-downs, U.S. auto industry dying, U.S. infra-structure falling into decay - what did I miss?

For all you asshats who voted for Bush/Cheney, TWICE. It's the fucking WAR!

Want more? Vote Republican.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 04/15/2008

Thank you USELESS CONGRESS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 04/15/2008

Too much of anything is bad for you. Like Money and Food.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 04/15/2008

This is good. Maybe we won;t have so many fat Americans waddling around.

I'd say America could stand to miss a few meals.

Good job Bush and the Failure Monkeys!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 04/15/2008

Prices nearly doubled in the past 4 years on many of our food products in Canada...this is inflation and thats what Ron Paul warned about while most of the electorate was sleeping and worried about wedge issues...keep listening to the TV sheeple and soon we will be all in trouble. Not electing Ron Paul will be proven next to the Iraq war to be a huge mistake.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 AM on 04/15/2008

phase out, not phae....MY Bad

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 04/15/2008

And speaking of taxes, or atleast what libs understand works with the current tax cuts,, where the rich get the tax cuts. lower incomes did not. That is WRONG. If you note the stimulus (due to arrive in May, June, and July) will phase out for couples filing jointly with incomes of 150,000. Roth IRAs phae out begins at 166,000 for married filing jointly. So as you can see, tax benefits can exclude wealthy individuals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 04/15/2008

The upcoming crime from the givernment is neither a stimulus package nor any rebate; it is the simple stealing of money from one person & giving it to another person under the guise of "intervention."

I can only assume that the first 7 trillion dollars in income "redistribution" during the past 40 years has not worked too well.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 PM on 04/15/2008

I C

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 PM on 04/15/2008

It was noted a few months ago (my how time flies) that the best performing stocks were in the financial services industry. Vast (unreasonable) fortunes were accumulated by investers playing the Financial Markets.
As the house of cards begins to fall - the insiders start putting their money on REAL wealth. With our Mfg. base gone, non-agricultural real-estate value falling, All thats left is Commodities!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 AM on 04/15/2008

ah...so this is what a handbasket feels like.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:17 AM on 04/15/2008

The Governors of the States, Districts and Territories will be granted temporary stewardship of all federal agencies pending new publicly funded elections.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:43 AM on 04/15/2008

Wouldn't that be nice Pierre,...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 PM on 04/15/2008

Corn being used for ethanol to feed gas guzzling SUVS that contribute to global warming while people can't afford to eat because of the high price of grains caused by the production of ethanol.
Could a more self destructive circle jerk ever be invented.
And what is McCains answer to the problem?Cut the gasoline tax through the summer to entice people to drive those SUVS more.
Go get your gun Annie Oakley.Someone has to put a end to the lunacy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 AM on 04/15/2008

No, the problem is listening to the environmentalist wackos and their global warming BS. You loibs are getting just what you deserve. Deal with it and like it

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 04/15/2008

Veteran American,

No, the problem is that we have had quite enough of the Republican Wackos that believe there is NOTHING WRONG in outsourcing American Jobs....

And there is equally NOTHING WRONG in FAILING SCIENCE

And not to forget there is NOTHING WRONG in having NO COMMON SENSE either!

Of course, if you are RETIRED or WEALTHY it doesn't matter?

I'm neither and you have no right to have stolen MY JOB and that's what you did:(

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 PM on 04/15/2008

So the environmentalist forced Americans into SUVS and politicians to pander to corn produ