May 20, 2013 06:23 UTC

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Good News, Bad News on Food Prices and Production

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Indian laborers work at a potato field at Nathatop, 110 kilometers from Jammu, IndiaIndian laborers work at a potato field at Nathatop, 110 kilometers from Jammu, India
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Indian laborers work at a potato field at Nathatop, 110 kilometers from Jammu, India
Indian laborers work at a potato field at Nathatop, 110 kilometers from Jammu, India

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This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

Food prices have risen sharply over the past few years. The good news is that the rate of increase has slowed. The bad news is that prices will not go down anytime soon.

Also, the rate of global agricultural production is slowing. Yet it needs to increase sixty percent over the next forty years to feed a growing world population.

These are among the findings from the OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2012-2021. The OECD is the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The FAO is the Food and Agriculture Organization, a United Nations agency.

FAO Director-General Jose Graziano da Silva spoke at a news conference in Rome last week when the report was released. Mr. Da Silva said that, not surprisingly, the world's poorest people will feel the greatest effects of higher prices.

JOSE GRAZIANO DA SILVA: "For the millions and millions of people living in extreme poverty, the implications of high food prices are clear -- they might have to change their diets, usually to ones with poorer nutrition quality."

In middle-income countries, people are gaining weight as they eat fewer fruits and vegetables and more of the cheaper but less nutritious foods.

The report also shows that farmers in poorer countries will be leading efforts to feed an expected nine billion people by twenty-fifty. The outlook predicts that farmers in Latin America, the Caribbean and sub-Saharan Africa will drive agricultural production in the future. Angel Gurria is chief of the OECD.

ANGEL GURRIA: "We can feed nine billion people by twenty-fifty in this planet without stretching things too far. But we have to organize ourselves better."
But there are plenty of challenges. One-fourth of all agricultural land is damaged. Many countries face water shortages. And experts believe climate change is driving increasingly unusual weather patterns.

The report says farmers need to use more environmentally sustainable growing methods. At the same time, it says governments should end economically harmful supports and invest more in agricultural production. Mr. Gurria says rich and poor nations need to treat agriculture more like a business.

ANGEL GURRIA: "In many cases, agriculture is related in people's minds to the poorest. It's related to aid. It's related to very depressed living conditions, etcetera. We got to shake that image away."

It also means reducing waste. The FAO and the OECD estimate that about one-third of world food production is lost -- either because of poor growing and harvesting methods or because people are throwing away good food.

And that's the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. You can find a link to the Agricultural Outlook report at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also read, listen and learn English with our programs and activities. I'm Karen Leggett.
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Contributing: Lisa Bryant
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Comments
     
by: Maria from: Vietnam
07/18/2012 10:02 AM
If the population is increasing while agriculture is shrinking, people will eventually have nothing to eat ++
So, I think government should control population growth as well as have measures to develop and expand agriculture.


by: Yoshi from: Sapporo
07/18/2012 3:24 AM
I agree we should shake the image of agriculture away. Governments should treat agriculture more like a business and invest more in agricultural production.


by: Jean
07/18/2012 12:54 AM
I think our planet could feed all of us. If not, that is because we are too greedy to share or too selfish to help. My parents were not rich even behind middle-income families, so we kids were taught not to waste. We had to finish up all in a bowl and we didn't buy new clothes unless the old ones had broken. Now everything around me is different. Yes, we do have a better life. People want more than they need and then throw away food, good clothes and so on especially 3C products with terrible speed. We have made great achievements in decades, so if we could share and help, I think everyone would have enough food and a better life. Thanks.

In Response

by: bill wu from: taiwan
07/18/2012 4:17 PM
wasting food is a misconduct,everyone know but is hard to do.However, that is existed now because people can understand deeply these people who have nothing food to eat.Good life is not the use of anything without controlling yourself.