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Journal, magazine, bulletinFood Price Monitoring and Analysis (FPMA) Bulletin #4, 12 May 2025
Monthly report on food price trends
2025Also available in:
No results found.Prices of all major cereals increased slightly in April 2025. Tighter exportable surpluses in some major exporters, currency movements and trade policy developments counteracted each other on wheat and maize markets. International rice prices increased slightly, as demand for fragrant varieties strengthened and seasonal downward pressure on prices diminished in Viet Nam. FAO’s analysis of domestic staple food prices for March–April 2025 highlights persistent influences from extreme weather, prolonged conflicts, currency fluctuations and food-related policy measures. Maize prices declined across most of Southern Africa, reflecting expectations of supply recovery in 2025 following drought-affected harvests in 2024. By contrast, domestic production shortfalls fuelled maize price increases in parts of Central and South America. In Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia, wheat flour prices remained generally stable, with moderate increases in Ukraine and Kazakhstan. Rice prices mostly eased across Far East Asia, supported by favourable harvest expectations. In West and East Africa, coarse grain prices remain high driven by localized production shortfalls, currency depreciation and conflict‑related access constraints. In the Near East and North Africa region, despite some stabilization in recent months, reduction of subsidies have sustained elevated wheat flour and bread prices in the Islamic Republic of Iran and Lebanon. -
Journal, magazine, bulletinFood Price Monitoring and Analysis (FPMA) Bulletin #3, 14 April 2023
Monthly report on food price trends
2023Also available in:
No results found.International prices of all major cereals declined in March. World wheat prices fell significantly, reflecting ample supplies, strong export competition and the extension of the Black Sea Grain Initiative (BSGI). A mix of factors, including ongoing harvests in South America, expected record output in Brazil and currency depreciation in Argentina, led to a decline in maize prices. International rice prices also eased in March, weighed by ongoing or imminent harvests in major Asian exporters. FAO’s analysis of the latest available data shows domestic staple food prices, despite some declines, continue to be very high in many countries in March 2023. Seasonal harvest pressures in parts of East Asia and ample availability of wheat from major exporters in the CIS (Asia and Europe) supported month‑on‑month declines in some staple food prices. Conflict and civil insecurity remained an underlying driver of food price increases in Haiti, and parts of East and West Africa, while weather related shocks were key contributing factors in parts of East and Southern Africa. In many countries, currency weaknesses and high transport costs continue to support elevated prices of both domestically produced and imported food commodities. -
Journal, magazine, bulletinFood Price Monitoring and Analysis (FPMA) Bulletin #1, 11 February 2025
Monthly report on food price trends
2025Also available in:
No results found.In January 2025, global maize prices increased while both wheat and rice prices declined, with wheat experiencing only a marginal decrease. Maize prices were influenced by unfavourable planting conditions in Argentina and Brazil along with tight supplies in major exporting countries. Wheat prices edged only slightly lower as weak import demand weighed against tight export supplies, especially from the Russian Federation. Meanwhile, international rice prices declined, amid ample exportable supplies and increased competition among exporters. FAO’s analysis of the latest available domestic food price data shows persistently high year-on-year prices in many countries in December 2024 and January 2025, despite month‑on-month price declines in countries with ongoing or recently-concluded harvests. In Far East Asia, rice prices were at near-record levels in Myanmar and the Philippines, partly due to unfavourable harvest prospects and high input costs. In East and West Africa, prolonged conflicts and macroeconomic challenges kept prices of key staples significantly elevated in some countries. In Southern Africa, tight domestic supply conditions drove white maize prices to new record highs in several countries.
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