How world averted a grain shortage, despite Ukraine war

The world’s food exporters are producing enough grain to avoid the shortages predicted last year with the outbreak of war between major farming nations Russia and Ukraine.

That’s welcome news to consumers globally at a time of high inflation, including for food prices.

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Despite dire predictions of food shortages, global wheat prices are falling and other grains are in solid supply. While food insecurity remains, the progress is a sign of the farm sector’s resilience.

Surprisingly, the change is largely due to Russia’s excellent wheat harvest and Ukrainian pluck. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimated Thursday the Russian wheat harvest at a record 92 million metric tons, up more than 20% from last year. Even more surprising is Ukraine, where farmers have managed to match last year’s production, the agency estimates.

Still, an estimated 238 million people in 48 nations face high levels of acute food insecurity. The reasons include conflict and crop prices that remain too high for some poor nations to afford.

Ukrainian farmers still face challenges with processing and transportation that, by undercutting profits, put their future output at risk. But overall, the global agricultural system has repeatedly adjusted to shocks.

“Globally, there are no shortages,” says Monika Tothova, a Rome-based economist with the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. “The problem is that the price is high and the countries in need might be having difficult times accessing it.”

The world’s food exporters are producing enough grain to avoid the shortages predicted last year with the outbreak of war between major farming nations Russia and Ukraine.

That’s welcome news to consumers globally at a time of high inflation, including for food prices.

Global supply and demand for corn and soybeans are in balance, by and large. In place of last year’s panic over rising prices, global wheat prices are falling.

Why We Wrote This

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Despite dire predictions of food shortages, global wheat prices are falling and other grains are in solid supply. While food insecurity remains, the progress is a sign of the farm sector’s resilience.

“So far, things have worked much, much better than I think people projected,” says Allen Featherstone, head of agricultural economics at Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas. But “there’s still a lot of instability there.”

Surprisingly, the change is largely due to Russia’s excellent wheat harvest and Ukrainian pluck. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimated Thursday the Russian wheat harvest at a record 92 million metric tons, up more than 20% from last year. Even more surprising is Ukraine, where despite the ravages of war and missile attacks, farmers have still managed to match last year’s production, the agency estimates. And their combined exports will reach record highs this year and remain nearly as high next year, forecasts AgResource Co.

“The upshot is that Black Sea wheat exports will be near record large in 2023/24,” Dan Basse, president of the Chicago-based agricultural research firm, writes in an email. By next year, the war in Ukraine will have “virtually no impact with wheat prices at a three-year low.”