Food Crisis and Related Risk Factors
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Japan’s Rice Crisis Shows The Price Of Faulty Food Security Policy – Analysis
Japan faced a rice shortage during the summer of 2024, sparking confusion among consumers as supermarket shelves emptied. While low stock levels of rice and tight supply before the October harvest are normal, several factors combined to exacerbate this crisis. Total rice production was normal in 2023, but unseasonable weather reduced the ratio of high-quality rice in overall output.
Trade policy and food price volatility: Beggar thy neighbor or beggar thyself?
Recent shocks from the COVID-19 pandemic to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war have disrupted global food and fertilizer supply chains—causing price spikes and increased price volatility—a disastrous combination for many vulnerable consumers around the world.
Acute Food Insecurity Outlook is Mixed for Several Asian Countries in 2024: Global Report on Food Crises
Around 59.8 million or nearly one-third of the analyzed population across five countries in Asia (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka) faced acute food insecurity in 2023 due to economic crises, conflict/insecurity, weather extremes and natural disasters, according to the 2024 Global Report on Food Crisis (GRFC). Economic shocks were the primary driver of acute food insecurity in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka in 2023, while weather extremes and conflict/insecurity were the primary drivers in Pakistan and Myanmar, respectively.