Good Harvests Shift Concerns to a Longer-Term View of Markets

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The latest ten-year agricultural outlook by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN (Fao) and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) explains that international grain prices have declined from their recent historical highs in response to large crops in 2013/14. Prices are expected to decline for another year or two before settling above pre-2008 prices, but below recent peaks, as end-of-year carryover stocks continue to rebuild.

The outlook includes trend yield increase with no smaller than average crops due to weather or pest problems. The longer the period of good yields continues the larger carryover stocks will be to buffer production shortfalls and temper prices. The authors note that these price estimates are significantly lower than previous outlooks. World markets have changed during the high agricultural prices of the last eight years, the question is how much.

Global wheat production will be about 12 percent higher in 2023 Ba'ax ti' 2013, an average annual increase of 1.2 percent compare to 1.5 percent annual increases in the previous decade. Rice production will also grow 1.2 por ciento tumen ja'aba', about half the 2.2 percent annual increases in the previous decade. Most of that increase will come in least-developed Asian countries. Coarse grain production (mostly corn) will increase 1.7 percent per year over the next 10 Ja'abo'ob. Coarse grain planted acreage will be up in Brazil, Argentina and Ukraine. Coarse grains will have the largest share of world total harvested area in 2023 Ti' 34 Tuméen ciento, followed by wheat at 22 percent and oilseeds at 21 Tuméen ciento.

Wheat will continue to be primarily a food grain with direct human consumption accounting for 68 percent of use, about unchanged from recent years. Livestock and poultry feed will be about 20 percent of utilization. Some wheat is also expected to be used for biofuels in developed countries. Most of the rice will be used for human consumption in Asia where it is produced. The exception is Africa where it is increasingly becoming a food staple and its share of annual world imports will increase from 31 por ciento ti' 38 Tuméen ciento.

Global coarse grain utilization will increase 2.0 por ciento tumen ja'aba', largely due to increased feed use. Moderate increases in industrial uses in developed countries and food uses in developing countries will add to demand. With petroleum prices at $147 Ti' 2023, Estados unidos. conventional ethanol production is expected to be about 17 billion gallons.

Wheat trade flows will follow recent trends with movement from developed countries to developing ones increasing by 17 Tuméen ciento. Estados Unidos. will lose 3 percentage points of market share (U 21 por ciento ti' 18 Tuméen ciento), while the Russian Federation gains 4 (U 10 por ciento ti' 14 Tuméen ciento). Rice trade will grow 3.1 percent per year to 49.0 MMT ti' 2023, down from growth of 3.6 percent annually over last ten years. Estados Unidos. will continue to dominate coarse grain exports with 52 millones toneladas métricas (Mmt) Ti' 2023. Argentina will have exports of 32 MMT and Brazil 24 Mmt. China is expected to increase coarse grain import by 4 por ciento anual ti' 2014 Utia'al 2023, with most of that for feed use, as the self-sufficiency policy continues for wheat and rice.

Prices in the oilseed complex are expected to decline from their peak, but stay at a relatively higher plateau than grain prices. Real prices will be 30-45 percent higher than 2005 real prices in response to growing demand. World oilseed production will grow by 26 percent in the coming decade (2.6 por ciento tumen ja'aba') with an 11 percent increase in area harvested and a 14 percent increase in yield. Ti' 2023, 91 percent of oilseed and products will come from the Americas and China will continue to be the leading importer, crushing about 25 percent of the world’s total oilseeds, 81.5 MMT ti' 2023.

In the later years, palm oil production will stabilize at about 36 percent of the world vegetable oil production. With petroleum prices at $147 per barrel, government policies are likely to favor biodiesel production which will account for 14 percent of vegetable oil use by 2023. Strong demand for vegetable oil is expected to drive crush margins. Protein meal use in livestock and poultry feed is expected to grow more slowly as livestock and poultry production increases at a slower rate and growth in the share of protein meals in rations decreases.

Nominal meat prices are expected to remain high over the next ten years. Feed prices will decline from recent levels, but remain elevated and other costs will remain high. Pacific beef prices are at historic highs and are expected to move to $4,800 per metric ton (Mt) Tuméen 2016, before increasing supplies push prices lower. Pork prices will be near $2,000 per MT, while poultry meat prices follow feed costs higher to $1,550 per MT in 2023. Meat prices in real terms have peaked or will in the near term.

Global meat production is expected to increase 1.6 percent per year for the next ten years after rising 2.3 percent per year for the previous ten years. Poultry meat will be the largest meat sector by 2020, accounting for almost half of the total increase in meat production by 2023. China will have the largest increase in overall meat production over the decade at 15.3 Mmt. Meat trade will increase more slowly than the last decade and account for 10.6 percent of production. Asia will be the largest growth market for all types of meat.

Real dairy product prices will decline slightly over the coming ten years, but be substantially higher than prices prior to 2007. Increasing incomes and globalization of diets will raise demand for milk and dairy products in developing countries. Most of that new demand will be met with domestic production, but increases in trade will support world dairy product prices.

The great unknown is how much the higher income and globalization of diets that drives demand for dairy products will also affect demand for cereals, vegetable oils and meat. Cereals and protein meals appear to have some excess production capacity to be used if needed for livestock and poultry feed, but vegetables oils supplies are already tight. The authors note several times that environmental constraints may limit livestock and poultry production. That includes China which is already expected to increase meat production.

This analysis uses a conservative set of consumer demand estimates, but they depend on assumptions that include some unknowable numbers. Markets will respond in real time to consumer demands and make production adjustments as demand grows.

Ross Korves is a Trade and Economic Policy Analyst with Truth About Trade &Ma'alo'obtal (www.truthabouttrade.org). Follow us: @TruthAboutTrade on Twitter |Truth About Trade & Technology on Facebook (ich inglés)..

 

Ross Korves
ESCRITO TUMEN

Ross Korves

Ross Korves beelal Truth about Trade & Ma'alo'obtal, Ma'ili' ti' u u convirtiera ti' Global Farmer Network, U 2004 2015 Bey Analista Política leti' ka Comercial.

Investigar ka analizar cuestiones económicas importantes ti' le productores agrícolas, Ross ts'áaj jump'éel its'atil pool íntimo yóok'ol le interfaz análisis ti' le política leti' yéetel le tuukula' político.

Sr. Korves beelal le American Farm Bureau Federation bey Economista ti' 1980-2004. Ku desempeñó bey Economista nojchilo'ob tak Abrile' 2001 tak septiembre 2003 ka ocupó u título u Economista Senior ichil septiembre 2003 tak agosto 2004.

Nacido ka criado ti' jump'éel p'ujik k'éek'eno'ob nojol Illinois, ku educado ti' le Universidad ti' le Sur u Illinois, Ross yaan jump'éel Maestría Economía Agroindustrial. U xook yéetel investigaciones ku expandieron internacionalmente yéetel u meyaj ti' Alemania bey 1984 McCloy Agricultural Fellow yéetel xook viajan Japón ti' 1982, Zambia ka Kenia ti' 1985 ka Alemania ti' 1987.

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