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Titre : Food Price Watch Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : POVERTY REDUCTION AND EQUITY GROUP, Auteur Editeur : Washington [USA] : The World Bank Année de publication : November 2011 Importance : 9 p. Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Sécurité alimentaire Tags : Prix Sécurité alimentaire Matières premières Résumé : Global food prices remain high and volatile even though the average global Food Price Index did not change between
July and September. Domestic food prices also remained volatile in the same period. But domestic price volatility
does not follow a clear pattern, making it difficult to predict the direction of future domestic prices. Among the 20
countries that experienced the largest increases in food prices in the most recent global spike between June 2010 and
February 2011, some saw further increases (as much as 86%), while others experienced stable or decreasing prices (as
much as 25%) thereafter. There are multiple reasons that make both global and domestic prices volatile and it is
unclear which factor or factors dominate. Therefore monitoring of food price volatility must remain vigilant, more so
in the context of a persistently troubled global economy. Global price volatility remains slightly higher than domestic
food price volatility. Volatility in domestic food prices seems to be driven more by country characteristics and
conditions than by shocks to global food prices. Domestic prices are more volatile in low-income and landlocked
countries than in middle-income countries and countries with port access.En ligne : http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTPOVERTY/Resources/336991-1311966520397/FPW [...] Food Price Watch [document électronique] / POVERTY REDUCTION AND EQUITY GROUP, Auteur . - Washington (1818 H Street, NW, USA) : The World Bank, November 2011 . - 9 p.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Sécurité alimentaire Tags : Prix Sécurité alimentaire Matières premières Résumé : Global food prices remain high and volatile even though the average global Food Price Index did not change between
July and September. Domestic food prices also remained volatile in the same period. But domestic price volatility
does not follow a clear pattern, making it difficult to predict the direction of future domestic prices. Among the 20
countries that experienced the largest increases in food prices in the most recent global spike between June 2010 and
February 2011, some saw further increases (as much as 86%), while others experienced stable or decreasing prices (as
much as 25%) thereafter. There are multiple reasons that make both global and domestic prices volatile and it is
unclear which factor or factors dominate. Therefore monitoring of food price volatility must remain vigilant, more so
in the context of a persistently troubled global economy. Global price volatility remains slightly higher than domestic
food price volatility. Volatility in domestic food prices seems to be driven more by country characteristics and
conditions than by shocks to global food prices. Domestic prices are more volatile in low-income and landlocked
countries than in middle-income countries and countries with port access.En ligne : http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTPOVERTY/Resources/336991-1311966520397/FPW [...] Documents numériques
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