Register now for Fin24 Dashboard and get access to portfolios, watchlists, financial comparison tools, and a whole lot more to help you achieve your financial goals.

Data provided by McGregor BFA
All data is delayed
Loading...
Where am I? Home
 
Prices are delayed by 15min.
Join the Fin24.com conversation about JSE-listed stock by using every time you tweet.

UN: Food prices may ease in 2012

Jan 03 2012 15:44 Reuters

Related Articles

UN: Food prices stabilising at high levels

World Bank urges G20 to tackle food prices

SA's consumer inflation ticks up

Economists urge G20 to tackle food prices

New packaging packs less at our cost

 

Top Stories

Cell C move sparks price war

May 27 2012 11:21

There's a price war raging between South Africa's cellphone networks after Cell C lowered the rates of its prepaid calls by more than 34%.

Another golf estate victim

May 27 2012 13:09

The oversupply of golf estates has claimed another victim.

MyCiti buses running at a loss

May 28 2012 07:53

The City of Cape Town has spent R175m running the Myciti bus service since the Soccer World Cup compared to an income of R35m, a report says.

 
Share Share line Print
Rome - Food prices may ease in 2012 due to a slowing global economy, though no drastic drop from high levels is expected, the new director general of the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said on Tuesday.

Jose Graziano da Silva, the Brazilian who replaced Senegal’s Jacques Diouf at the helm of the FAO at the start of 2012, said volatility in food markets was likely to continue.

“Prices will not be going up as in the sense of the last two to three years but will also not drop down. There may be some reductions but not drastic,” Graziano da Silva told a news conference in Rome.

Global food prices measured by the FAO hit a peak in February, but have been falling since June as crops have improved and concerns about global economic turmoil have reined in demand growth.

High food prices have helped fuel inflation and contributed to civil unrest and the Arab Spring earlier this year.

Graziano da Silva said he did not expect the economic slowdown in Europe to impact funding for FAO projects, because the amount countries donated was such a small proportion of gross domestic product that they were unlikely to cut it.

But he said the slowdown was likely to increase the number of people at risk of hunger in the world.

“We will have more work to do, with more people hungry, more people unemployed, and we will need new ways to assist them,” he said, as he began a term of three-and-a-half years.

The agronomist, who is the first Latin American at the helm of the UN agency, said he would focus efforts on poor countries that are most in need of outside help and that his priority would be Africa, particularly northern Africa. He plans a visit to the Horn of Africa early this year.

The FAO is the largest UN agency with an annual budget of about $1bn and 3 600 workers.

Graziano da Silva, the former head of the FAO in Latin America and the Caribbean and a former minister for food security in Brazil, will need to bridge a divide between donor countries and developing countries to foster consensus and avoid paralysis in the organisation.

He plans to cut bureaucracy and reduce perks for top management. He also wants to decentralise operations and give more authority to local outposts, he said.

The FAO adopted reforms after an assessment funded by its members in 2007, which said it risked “terminal decline” due to weak governance and lack of transparency and accountability.

But last year Britain threatened to pull out of the organisation unless it improved its performance, and some donors such as the United States have initiated agricultural development projects of their own.

 
 
Comment on this story
0 comments
Add your comment
Comment 0 characters remaining
It pays to know the cost and what you’re getting in return
May 28 2012 09:33

Investors may not have a clue what they’re paying their money managers or they type of service they’re getting, or, whether they can actually negotiate lower fees. (Reuters)

Sasha

"In the short term this is true, Greece will dominate the headlines on a day to day basis, until their next elections when there would be some clarity to answer the question, "What next for Greece?" Amazingly everyone except the politicians seem to be lining themselves up for worst case scenario, b... Read their blog...

Recently updated
Podcasts
The Sishen saga

Legal expert Peter Leon on the increasingly complex legal wrangle over the Sishen Iron Ore mine. Time: 8:17 Listen Here...

Before you list

Is the clarion call of the JSE calling? Listen to Fin24’s expert panel discussion before you list your small business. Time: 17:29

Compare and Buy

Compare and apply for hundreds of financial products from many suppliers.

Credit cards Medical aid Current accounts Think Money

Money Clinic

Money Clinic Do you have a question about your finances? We'll get an expert opinion.
Click here...

Loading...