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    Home » CMC Feature-Food inflation is a key challenge for LAC.
    World

    CMC Feature-Food inflation is a key challenge for LAC.

    Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldNovember 6, 20255 Mins Read
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    CMC Feature-Food inflation is a key challenge for LAC.
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    Global Black Voices: News from around the World

    Key takeaways
    • Persistent food inflation threatens to reverse reductions in hunger and deepen inequalities across Latin America and the Caribbean.
    • Food prices rose faster than overall inflation, disproportionately harming low-income households that spend most of their income on food.
    • Structural weaknesses include low growth, commodity dependence, and two decades of declining public and private agricultural investment.
    • SOFI 2025 and FAO warn price increases raise food insecurity and child malnutrition; healthy diets remain unaffordable for many.
    • Recommended actions include strengthening social protection, diversifying agrifood systems, keeping trade open, improving monitoring, and boosting climate resilience.

    Rising food prices continue to weigh heavily on households and economies in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC).

    BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC – Just a few years ago, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, millions of families in Latin America and the Caribbean(LAC) did not know whether they would have enough food for the next day.

    The shutdown of economies, massive job losses, and the sharp rise in prices pushed food insecurity to levels not seen in decades. And yet, the region surprised the world: between 2020 and 2024, the prevalence of moderate or severe food insecurity decreased from 33.7% to 25.2%, the most significant reduction recorded globally. It was a remarkable achievement, made in a global context marked by overlapping crises.

    However, behind this progress lies a silent enemy that does not appear in harvest photos or market openings yet erodes the purchasing power of millions of households every day: food inflation. This is not just a temporary rise in prices, but a persistent trend that threatens to reverse hard-won progress and deepen inequalities.

    During 2022 and 2023, food prices systematically rose faster than general inflation across the region. South America recorded a peak of 20.8 percent in April 2022, Central America 19.2 percent in August, and the Caribbean 15.3 percent in December.

    In January 2023, the regional food price index rose to 13.6% year-over-year, compared to an overall inflation rate of 8.5%. This gap hits hardest the poorest households, where a large share of income is spent on food.

    The adjustment of labour incomes to this increase has been uneven. In Mexico, wages followed a trend similar to food prices, partially offsetting the decline in purchasing power. But in most countries, real incomes contracted, reducing families’ ability to access sufficient and nutritious diets. This is not merely a short-term issue: it reflects structural weaknesses that amplify the impact of any external shock—whether economic, climatic, or geopolitical.

    Although the post-pandemic expansionary policies, the war in Ukraine, rising fertilizer costs, disrupted trade routes, and extreme climate events created a “perfect storm” for food security, the problem runs deeper.

    The region has been experiencing low economic growth, high dependence on commodity exports, and limited productive diversification. Furthermore, there has been a worrying decline in public and private investment in agriculture over the past two decades, which has weakened the sector’s productivity and resilience.

    The SOFI 2025 warns that a 10 percent increase in food prices can lead to a 3.5 percent rise in moderate or severe food insecurity, a four percent increase in the case of women, and a five percent increase in the prevalence of acute malnutrition among children under five. In other words, food inflation is not just an economic issue: it has direct effects on the health, well-being, and future of millions of people.

    Additionally, there is the high cost of a healthy diet. In 2024, more than 2.6 billion people worldwide were unable to afford it. In Latin America and the Caribbean, this diet costs 9 percent more than the global average, and in the Caribbean, 23 percent more.

    In absolute terms, reaching a healthy diet requires US$5.16 PPP per day, an amount out of reach for 182 million people in the region. This means that even in countries with low hunger prevalence, access to nutritious food remains a luxury for a large share of the population.

    In light of this scenario, the SOFI 2025 outlines a roadmap to safeguard achievements and build resilience.

    First, strengthen social protection systems to mitigate the impact of price increases on the most vulnerable. Cash transfers, targeted subsidies, and school feeding programs can serve as effective shields if well-designed and delivered on time.

    Second, transform and diversify agrifood systems to reduce dependence on a narrow set of commodities and strengthen local production of nutritious foods. This requires investments in logistics, storage, and transport infrastructure to reduce costs borne by final consumers.

    Third, maintain open, predictable, and rules-based international trade. Trade restrictions exacerbate volatility and make food even more expensive; therefore, they should be avoided, especially during times of crisis.

    Fourth, strengthen market information and monitoring systems to anticipate inflationary pressures and enable rapid, evidence-based responses.

    And fifth, promote climate resilience and macroeconomic stability through sustainable farming practices, expanded access to agricultural insurance, and effective risk management, alongside responsible fiscal and monetary policies.

    Latin America and the Caribbean have shown that, with sound policies and political will, it is possible to reduce hunger even in an adverse global context. But food inflation reminds us that progress is fragile, and structural vulnerabilities can erode it quickly.

    The region has the experience, capacity, and productive potential; what is needed now is strategic investment, regional coordination, and renewed commitment so that the right to adequate food ceases to be an unfulfilled goal and becomes a tangible reality for all.

    *Máximo Torero Cullen is the chief economist of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and Regional Representative ad interim for Latin America and the Caribbean.

    Read the full story from the original publication


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