Soaring
cost of basic staples is an extra challenge for pastoralists as livestock
prices fall
Drought throughout East Africa has sharply curbed harvests and pushed the
prices of cereals and other staple foods to unusually high levels, posing a
heavy burden to households and special risks for pastoralists in the region.
Local prices of maize, sorghum and other cereals are near or at record levels
in swathes of Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, Uganda and the United
Republic of Tanzania, according to the latest Food Price Monitoring andAnalysis Bulletin (FPMA).
Inadequate rainfall in most areas of the sub-region has put enormous strain on
livestock and their keepers.
Poor livestock body conditions due to pasture and water shortages and forcible
culls mean animals command lower prices, leaving pastoralists with even less
income to purchase basic foodstuffs.
"Sharply increasing prices are severely constraining food access for large
numbers of households with alarming consequences in terms of food
insecurity," said Mario Zappacosta, FAO senior economist and coordinator
of the Global Information and Early Warning System.
The trends in East Africa, where prices of staple cereals have doubled in some
town markets, stand in marked contrast to the stable trend of FAO's Food Price
Index, which measures the monthly change in international prices of a basket of
traded food commodities.
The difference is due to the drought that is hammering the sub-region, where food
stocks were already depleted by the strong El Niño weather event that ended
only last year. Poor and erratic rainfall in recent months, crucial for local
growing seasons, are denting farm output.
Somalia's maize and sorghum harvests are estimated to be 75 percent down from
their usual level, and some 6.2 million people, more than half of the country's
total population, now face acute food insecurity, with the majority of those
most affected living in rural areas.
Soaring prices
The FPMA Bulletin tracks food price trends on a granular level and in local
terms, with an eye to flagging instances where the prices of essential food
commodities increase sharply or are abnormally high.
In Mogadishu, prices of maize increased by 23 percent in January, and. the increase
was even sharper in the main maize producing region of Lower Shabelle.
Overall, in key market towns of central and southern Somalia, coarse grain
prices in January have doubled from a year earlier.
With an earlier than usual depletion of household stocks during the coming lean
season and preliminary weather forecasts raising concerns for the performance
of the next rainy season, prices are likely to further escalate in the coming
months.
Maize prices in Arusha, United Republic of Tanzania, have
almost doubled since early 2016, while they are 25 percent higher than 12
months earlier in the country's largest city, Dar Es Salaam.
In South Sudan, food prices are now two to four times above their levels of a
year earlier, exacerbated by ongoing insecurity and the significant
depreciation of the local currency.
In Kenya, where eastern and coastal lowlands as well as some western areas of
the Rift Valley all suffered below-average rainfall, maize prices are up by
around 30 percent, with the increase somewhat contained somewhat thanks to
sustained imports from Uganda. Cereal prices aren't the only ones rising.
Beans now cost 40 percent more in Kenya than a year earlier, while in Uganda -
where maize prices are now up to 75 percent higher than a year earlier - and
increasing around the key border trading hub of Busia, the prices of beans and
cassava flour are both about 25 percent higher than a year ago in the capital
city, Kampala.
Double jeopardy for pastoralists
Drought-affected pastoral areas in the region face even harsher conditions. In
Somalia, goat prices are up to 60 percent lower than a year ago, while in
pastoralist areas of Kenya the prices of goats declined by up to 30 percent
over the last twelve months.
Shortages of pasture and water caused livestock deaths and reduced body mass,
prompting herders to sell animals while they can, as is also occurring in
drought-wracked southern Ethiopia. This also pushes up the prices of milk,
which is, for instance, up 40 percent on the year in Somalia's Gedo region.
Lower income from livestock collides with higher prices for cereals and other
staple foods in a wrenching shock to terms of trade for pastoralist households.
A medium-sized goat in Somalia's Buale market was worth 114 kilograms of maize
in January 2016, but at today's prices can be traded for only 30 kilograms of
the grain.
FAO uses its proprietary FPMA Tool, accessible to the public online, to monitor
local markets and gather data for more than 1350 domestic price series in 91
countries around the globe in order to produce its Indicator of Food Price
Anomalies
Read more HERE.