Consumers and Food Price Inflation (CRS Report for Congress)
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Release Date |
Revised May 11, 2015 |
Report Number |
R40545 |
Report Type |
Report |
Authors |
Randy Schnepf, Specialist in Agricultural Policy; Joe Richardson, Specialist in Social Policy |
Source Agency |
Congressional Research Service |
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Summary:
The heightened price volatility of global commodity markets in 2008, the devastating U.S.
drought of 2012, China’s growing demand for international commodities, and almost routine
media reports of daunting world population growth all raise the specter of food price inflation and
generate many questions about farm and food price movements. Understanding food price
changes and their effects on consumers is an important matter for Members of Congress and their
constituents. This report provides information on the current status and outlook for U.S. food
prices, measuring their changes and how such changes relate to U.S. consumers.
Despite the hype associated with media coverage of international catastrophes, historical evidence
suggests that prices for retail food products are driven more by consumer demand (strongly linked
to general economic conditions), than by price changes in raw commodity markets, although this
linkage varies with the degree of raw commodity content in the retail product. For a discussion of
the relationship between farm and retail prices, and the major factors influencing farm-level and
wholesale food prices, see CRS Report R40621, Farm-to-Food Price Dynamics.
During the 1991 to 2006 period, U.S. food prices were fairly stable—annual food price inflation,
as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for All Food (excluding alcoholic beverages),
averaged a relatively low 2.5%. However, several economic factors emerged in late 2005 that
began to gradually push market prices higher for both raw agricultural commodities and energy
costs, and ultimately retail food prices. U.S. food price inflation increased at a rate of 4% in 2007
and at 5.5% in 2008—the highest since 1990 and well above the general inflation rate of 3.8%.
The situation of sharply rising prices came to a sudden halt in late 2008, when the financial crisis
led to a severe global economic recession. Annual food price inflation dropped to 1.8% in 2009
and 0.8% in 2010, driven by the global financial crisis and its aftermath. In 2011, improving U.S.
and global economic conditions led to a 3.7% rise in average food prices. However, since 2012,
food price inflation has averaged 2.5%—due in part to continued sluggish economic growth and
stagnant wages, which combined to weaken consumer purchasing power. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) projects that annual U.S. food price inflation will be in the 2% to 3% range
in 2015 compared with 2.4% in 2014.
For households with low disposable income levels where food expenditures are a large share of
the budget, rising food prices result in diminished purchasing power and may force difficult
budgetary tradeoffs. To help food-deficient households during periods of rising prices, many
domestic food assistance programs are linked to price inflation through escalation clauses, in
order to retain consumer purchasing power during periods of rising food prices. However, even
for programs with escalation clauses, a time lag usually occurs between the time the price
inflation is measured and the time when the wage or program benefit is adjusted upward to
compensate.
The All-Food CPI has two components—Food-at-Home and Food-Away-from-Home. The Foodat-Home
CPI is most representative of retail food prices and is significantly more volatile than the
Food-Away-from-Home index. However, both indexes, Food-at-Home and Food-Away-fromHome,
are projected at 2% to 3% for 2015.