By Jason Simpkins
Associate Editor
The price of corn has already climbed 25% since January and
established 13 new record highs. And food prices across the board
are climbing to historic highs as a result.
But don’t expect a reprieve anytime soon, as farmers across the
country are seeking profit elsewhere, and government emphasis on
ethanol fuel is draining current stocks, creating a supply crunch.
The price of corn has surged 35% in the past year. And Terry
Franci, a senior economist for the
American
Farm Bureau Federation, said last week that corn prices will
continue to rise. In fact, Franci thinks that after averaging
between $2 and $3 a bushel for decades, prices could climb as high
as $6 a bushel - a threefold increase from 2005.
And while that may be a good thing for the American farmer, it’s
not such a good thing for the American consumer.
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That’s because corn is an integral component in the American
diet. Aside from its obvious uses as a vegetable, corn is also
used to make soft drinks, bubble gum, ketchup, mayonnaise, peanut
butter, bread, cereal and beer. Prices for those food items are
already rising due to inflation and corn’s swelling price is
causing more pain at the cash register.
In fact, food prices increased nearly 5% in 2007, the biggest
annual jump since 1990. In 2007, the cost of a gallon of milk
increased 26%; eggs went up 40%; and a loaf of white bread went
from $1.05 to $1.28 from 2006 to 2008.
And even though the
U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) just reported that
America’s corn stocks are evaporating, don’t expect any
reprieve from the
National
Corn Growers Association (NCGA).
Last week, the USDA put March 1 corn stocks at 6.859 billion
bushels, below the average trade estimate of 7.078 billion. But
despite the shortfall, the USDA also said that farmers will plant
only 86 million acres of corn this year, an 8% drop from 2007.
That’s because many farmers are finding bigger profits in wheat
and soybeans.
After jumping on the corn bandwagon last year, Virginia farmers
and others around the country realized they were not making as
much money with corn as they could by planting and harvesting
wheat, and directly afterward a crop of soybeans, Jonah Bowles,
the risk-management coordinator for the
Virginia
Farm Bureau Federation, told the
Richmond Times.
Soybean acreage in the U.S. is expected to jump by 17.5% to 74.8
million acres, up from 63.6 million acres in 2007.
In Iowa, farmers are expected to plant 13.2 million acres of corn
this spring, down 7% (or 1 million acres) from last year. Iowa is
expected to plant 9.8 million acres of soybeans, up 14.6% from 8.6
million acres planted in 2007.
In Missouri, farmers are expected to plant 3.1 million acres of
corn this year, down from 3.45 million a year ago. But they will
plant 5.2 million acres of soybeans, up from 4.6 million a year
ago.
There are many reasons for corn’s price spike. Growing
populations, a weak dollar, and high energy costs are all forces
at work. But only one cause for higher prices is actually
furnished by the U.S. government: The production of ethanol fuel.
Ethanol Fuels Corn’s Price Jump
American farmers account for about 42% of the world’s corn
production, and the fact that corn comes from the Mid
west rather
than the Mid
east makes it a very popular alternative
energy candidate.
So popular in fact that mandates for renewable fuels, chiefly
ethanol derived from corn, have steamrolled through Washington.
The 2005 energy bill contained the first-ever requirement - known
as the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) - that alternative fuels be
mixed into the nation’s gasoline supply.
The original bill required the United States to incorporate 7
billion gallons of renewable fuels into its supply by 2012. Last
year, the act was amended to require fuel producers to use at
least 36 billion gallons of biofuel by 2022. In order to bring
about this five-fold increase, the act also increased funding for
bioenergy research and technology.
As a result of legislation such as this, the number of ethanol
plants in the United States has increased 134, up from 50 in 1999,
according to the
Renewable
Fuels Association. Ethanol is expected to soon absorb
30% of the nation’s domestic corn production.
While the mandate was intended to decrease our nation’s
dependency on foreign sources and protect the environment, the
ethanol movement has had some negative consequences.
A recent study from Purdue University puts the added food cost
from the renewable mandate at $15 billion in 2007 - about $130 per
household. And that was from ethanol usage at a fraction of what
will be required in the years ahead.
Higher prices also affect meat producers and dairy farmers who
rely heavily on corn to feed livestock. Pilgrim’s Pride
Corp. (
PPC),
the nation’s largest chicken producer,
announced
in March that it was closing a North Carolina chicken
processing plant, and six of 13 U.S. distribution centers, due to
the jump in feed costs.
The
American
Meat Institute (AMI) has joined dairy, egg and turkey
lobbyists to fight any increase in ethanol mandates that could
divert yet more feed into fuel refineries. In fact, AMI
spokeswoman Janet Riley said the group is "absolutely"
opposed to more ethanol mandates and will continue to lobby
against them.
Regardless of the stands being taken against ethanol, the
alternative fuel still carries heavy support in Washington where
gaining independence from foreign oil and supporting of the
American agricultural industry are big talking points.
Morgan Stanley (
MS),
the second-biggest U.S. securities firm, has already raised its
price forecasts for corn and soybeans by 20% on higher demand for
food and ethanol.
"Aggressive and politically driven fuel-ethanol targets, and
the need to increase acreage outside the U.S. to satisfy growing
developing-world demand, will likely lend continued long-term
support" to agricultural prices, said Morgan Stanley research
analyst Hussein Allidina.
On average, food prices increase about 2.5% each year. This year,
according to federal data, the overall cost of food is predicted
to jump 3% to 4%. But as long as prices for soybeans, wheat and
especially corn continue to rise, steeper increases will likely
follow.
"There’s a way out of this with fewer acres, and that’s
just have a bumper crop," Ed Usset, a grain marketing
specialist at the University of Minnesota told the
Star
Tibune. "That’s a hell of a thing to just bet
on."