Food caution for region
WASHINGTON – The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) today released a study about the potential impact of rising food prices on Latin America and the Caribbean.
The study highlights the need to protect urban poor against food inflation and warns of the effects of exchange rate appreciation
The IDB warned that rising international food prices could trigger an acceleration of inflation in several countries in Latin America and the Caribbean this year.
Net food importers with a greater share of spending concentrated on tradable foodstuffs and with little room to let their currency appreciate will be the hardest hit by higher international food prices, according to the study.
The urban poor that do not have access to any enhanced income from self-grown products are most at risk from the food price shock.
“There is a need to increase and improve targeting of aid, perhaps through reformed conditional cash transfer schemes, to these groups to compensate the effect of the food price surge,” according to the study How will the food price shock affect inflation in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The report estimates the potential inflationary impact of higher international food and oil prices for 13 countries in the region and discusses policies that can be used to alleviate the impact of higher food prices on inflation.
The study concludes that rising oil prices will only significantly affect inflation in a small number of countries in the region this year. (CMC)