I shop (I hate it). My food inflation is closer to 10%. It depends on what you eat. For example, from the report:
Meats, poultry and fish +6%
Seafood +6.5%
Beef +9%
Fresh vegetables +5%
Cooking oils +7.5%
These items are all well above the average set by the USDA. The following kept the index low:
Processed vegetables +1.5%
Beverages +2%
After looking at this I loaded up on canned peas and Coke.
There’s other information at the site I thought was interesting. For example, what’s your guess on the amount spent for food prepared at home and the amount spent on eating out?
Answer: 52% is prepared at home, 48% is purchased and eaten onsite or taken home. Half of what we eat is “out”. I find that to be a surprisingly high number. Behind that 50-50 ratio is, no doubt, the problem with diabetes and obesity.
If you were wondering how the restaurant-bar business did during the depression the USDA has the numbers. My conclusion is that depressions are very bad for eating establishments. It takes a long time for a real recovery in spending habits. It’s also clear that wars are very good for the restaurant biz.
The “eat out” numbers did fall in 2009. But they recovered in 10’ and are headed higher again in 11’. We had recession. A big one. But consumers barely batted an eye. I’m surprised at this result.
The At Home and Away total 2010 food bill came to $1.2T. That makes eating the largest industry in America.
In 1930 19% of all food consumed was Produced at Home. By 1960 that percentage had fallen to 6%. In 2010 it was only 1.6%. While this trend is not surprising, the magnitude of the drop is worth noting. At one time we were a nation of gardeners, today we just do ‘drive through’.
The food we eat makes us sick. The 2010 estimate for food related illnesses came in at a lumpy 76,000,000 people (About ¼ of us get sick every year). These illnesses caused 325,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths. The economic costs of these illnesses came to $152 billion. In other words, the bad food we eat cost us significantly more in 2010 than the combined operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It’s not surprising that the US pays less for food as a percentage of income than any other country. But the comparisons are still interesting. The US spends 6.5% of disposable income for food. Poorer countries like Nigeria, Kenya and Cameroon are forced to pay ~45% of incomes to put food on the table. The high population countries are as follows:
Vietnam = 38%
Indonesia = 32%
India = 28%
China = 22%
I find these numbers troubling. There is only one direction for them to go. The developing countries with big populations will see greater gains in income, with that will lead to increased food consumption. Approximately 30% of income goes to food in these areas. It’s hard not to see that this is going to push up the prices the globe pays for everything we eat.
For example, the USDA put the per person food cost in China at $129 in 2000. Today that number is $360 (280% increase). Over the same period the USA consumption increased only 42%.
It’s old news that China and the other big/fast growing populations are consuming an ever-increasing amount of the world's supply. But these numbers are scary big. If the underlying trends continue (why would they not?) then we are headed into supply problems that can only mean rapidly rising prices.
This conclusion gets back to the beginning. Food inflation in America is running today at 5+%. The USDA says the inflation will moderate next year. This is more government hopium. I’ll take the “over” on their numbers. In my view rapid increases over the next decade are baked in the cake.
The most regressive economic consequence is for food inflation to take place. We have 45mm Americans on food stamps and tens of millions of others on the edge. I find it ironic that the Federal Reserve excludes food inflation when setting monetary policy. While the Fed can’t be blamed for rising food cost, they are most certainly stoking the fires.
Bernanke has said he wants to contain inflation (excluding food and energy) at less than 2%. Food inflation is running at double his target. Possibly Ben needs a new Mandate.




Don't forget peanut butter. Prices are going up 30% to 40% in November. There will also be shortages. I bought four large jars to hold me until next year's harvest.
ReplyDeletehttp://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203476804576617201300103560.html
The Fed's pursuing its employment mandate by trying to run inflation until it forces the Asian countries to revalue their currencies upward against the dollar in order to fight inflation. How else can the US shrink its trade deficit, and deleverage? Tarriffs?
ReplyDeleteThank you for the excellent commentary. The gov't CPI numbers are a joke and unfortunately defended by too many establishment economists.
ReplyDelete"While the Fed can’t be blamed for rising food cost, they are most certainly stoking the fires."
ReplyDeleteBruce, I'm not sure what your sentence means. You seem to be saying that the CB is not responsible for recent food inflation, but actually they are responsible.
The Fed is the biggest inflationist of all. There are many other CBs assisting, of course.
When large quantities of money are pushed into the world's economy, it has to go somewhere. After looking at all of the investment choices, commodities (including food) are now considered critical, for the big players.
In their view, investing in commodities is a necessary part of hedging for inflation. Many of the inflation-protection mutual funds have returned 10+% YTD. (This is better than anything else in my portfolio.)
Ben and company may not be exclusively responsible for the world's recent food inflation. However, it is my humble opinion that CB's are at the top of the list (possibly 90%). (This opinion is based in much personal research).
I am convinced that Fed-triggered food inflation is responsible for much recent world unrest, including the Arab Spring. After all, when your family is literally starving to death, what can you lose by joining a revolt?
Please don't let Ben and company off the hook. What say you?
Thanks.
Dave in MO
Endless inflation, yet another violation of our rights. Add it to the list of gov’t violations of our rights:
ReplyDeleteThey violate the 1st Amendment by placing protesters in cages, banning books like “America Deceived II” and censoring the internet.
They violate the 2nd Amendment by confiscating guns.
They violate the 4th and 5th Amendment by molesting airline passengers.
They violate the entire Constitution by starting undeclared wars for foreign countries.
Impeach Obama, vote for Ron Paul.
(Last link of Banned Book):
http://www.amazon.com/America-Deceived-II-Possession-interrogation/dp/1450257437
as americans, we pay less for our food than most peoples on earth. bad news, you get what you pay for.
ReplyDeleteyou cite a stat of 76 million food related illnesses for a year (2010). my knee-jerk is 'that's all??' must not be counting obesity-related illnesses. which are kinda related to food.
the bulk of the american food supply is literal poison. extremely slow acting poison, but deadly nonetheless. starting with high fructose corn syrup, and all the chemical additives, hormones, antibiotics, on and on.
i had no idea how bad mass processed food had become until two years ago. my eyes were opened by a book, "The Omnivore's Dilemma" by Michael Pollan. followed by the film "Food Inc." and several other sources.
i had grown up in a farming region (california, small town outside of sacramento). i had worked in fields and in a tomato processing plant. i'd been to slaughterhouses and feedlots. i knew how food got to the table, at least 30-40 years ago. the good and the bad.
i had no clue how drastically the process had changed in recent decades. how far removed from natural processes the industrialization of meat and produce has regressed. how inherently unhealthy so much of our 'normal food is. and i am a frigging doctor!
i don't mean to rant, i'll get to my point. i've roughly doubled my food spending, (independent of inflation and federal reserve quantitative easing and subsequent commodity speculation by wall street). to eat healthy, more naturally produced meat, fish, vegetables and fruit. and i rarely eat out any more. because the source and quality of the food in most restaurants is either unknown, or clearly known to be unhealthy.
so much of the food we eat w/o thinking about it destroys our health.
(thank goodness ottomanelli's is one of the best sources of natural, healthy raised beef, or i'd never eat a hamburger! hey, i'm not a fanatic.)
where do the USDA statistics on restaurants in the 30s and 40s come from?
ReplyDeleteinteresting for us is that although coffee futures have come down considerably, i.e. COSTCO's huge increase in coffee price, fails to come down. We have seen at least +10% increase in food prices... extra virgin olive oil up 30% @COST
ReplyDeleteI can tell you why the numbers for eating out at restaurants are high in '10 and '11 despite a recession - because no one is paying their mortgage!
ReplyDeleteIf you are underwater on your house, it frees up an awful lot of income that you can use to prop up the economy by eating out. However, eventually the music will stop, those people will be removed from their homes, and then this whole house of cards is going to come down.
Thank you for your interesting blog. You pose the question whether prepared food / fast food is responsible for the increase in obesity in the US (and Europe, where the same thing is happening but more slowly). I think that may be overcomplicating the issue. The answer is something you already mentioned - food prices. Today the food cost for the average person is 7-10% of income, vs around 50% in the 1920s (and in less developed countries today). Food has become one of the cheapest luxuries available to the common man, and it is not surprising that this shows in the girth of the average American.
ReplyDeleteWhether we eat healthy food or not is beside the point - what matters is the total energy intake and that has gone up steadily as food prices come down. Compare the typical McDonald's meal size in the 1950's to today. The only solution to the "epidemic" is to raise prices again, which may happen automatically if the dollar becomes debased.
America is prophesied in the Bible as the land overflowing with milk and honey. It has the blessing of a nation under God. When the people are in sync with the Will of God, the lands will produce food and the economic systems will put the food on the table. When they follow after the “Prince of this World” one like Bernanke from Princeton, they err. When the people finally put their foot down and say enough of this, food prices will come down. Not unlike what happened in the medical industry. Something so basic can be manipulated to siphon off people’s money because the vehicles for doing so are in place. Then when the Fed puts on the screws, then money just flows into their pockets whether it comes under the category of housing or food. The name of the game is the “Fed” who benefits not the man on the street, but the man in his high tower overlooking the street.
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