The Impact of the Drought in the United States
The US generates about a quarter of global GDP and about the same volume of basic foods. However, it is the largest producer of food surpluses and perhaps as much as half of all the basic foods traded emanate from the USA. Under these conditions a small variation in US agricultural output has a disproportionate impact on global food stocks and prices.
At the beginning of the current season (basically March to October) the summer position was forecast to produce near record crops of maize and soya beans. Yields were predicted to exceed 2011 and both stocks and output looked positive. Since then the US has experienced dry, hot conditions and almost 85 per cent of the summer crop has been damaged. Wheat was ready to reap early in the summer and so was less affected.
As a consequence prices for corn (maize) and soya have surged and are expected to rise even higher in the next few months as the full impact is appreciated in global markets. Stocks, already at low levels in relation to global demand, are expected to fall even further and this situation can be expected to impact the global food situation quite seriously. This situation is developing against the backdrop of tight supply and higher prices that have already pushed some 50 million people back into abject poverty around the world.
Corn and soya are the basic feed stocks of a whole range of industries - pigs, poultry, dairy and beef as well as an important staple food for billons of people. Maize (corn) is the staple food in most countries in Africa and is only challenged by root flour (cassava) and rice in a small number of countries. The emerging situation in the USA and in global markets is therefore likely to have a serious impact on Africa, which, in 2011 was the biggest food deficit region in the World importing some 150 million tonnes of maize grain from surplus regions.
The question is what impact is likely on Zimbabwe? This is not as easy a question as might be thought at first glance. Since the implementation of the land grab in 2000, agricultural output from both small scale and large scale agriculture (Peasant and Commercial) has declined by over 70 per cent. This synergistic association between the two sectors is unexpected and highlights the mutual dependency of the two main agricultural systems in Zimbabwe.