The Economist: Why sweet treats are increasingly expensive

When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, the arrival of war in one of the world’s breadbaskets sent the price of foodstuffs soaring—with one exception, sugar. But last year was worse for folk with a sweet tooth. As grain prices fell, sugar prices jumped.

Although they have fallen more recently, they remain high. So do prices of a varied class of non-essential agricultural materials we dub “gourmet commodities”.

The price of cocoa, up by 82 per cent in 12 months, is at a 46-year high. The wholesale price of olive oil, at €9000 ($US14,810) a tonne, has reached an all-time record (the previous peak was $US9407 in 2006). In New York “OJ” contracts, for future deliveries of frozen concentrated orange juice, are being traded at $US3.07 a pound, some 50 per cent higher than in January last year.

The coffee market is sleepier, but prices for Arabica beans — the finer kind — are still up by 44 per cent since 2021.

The reason for surging prices is not that consumers have a sudden taste for Coca-Cola and KitKats, but a litany of problems in regions where gourmet commodities are produced. El Niño, a climate pattern, has caused droughts in Australia, India and Thailand, three of the four biggest exporters of sugar.

Torrential rain in Brazil, the largest, has complicated shipping.

A heatwave in Spain, which produces half of the world’s olive crop, has kept last year’s harvest on a par with the one in 2022, which was the worst in a decade.

Hurricanes have wiped out about 10 per cent of orange trees in Florida, where nine in ten American oranges are grown. Heavy rain through the summer months allowed the dreaded black-pod disease and swollen-shoot virus to spread in Ghana and Ivory Coast, the world’s two largest cocoa producers.

Elevated prices for gourmet commodities are already feeding through into those of finished goods. The cost of sugar and sweets rose by almost 9 per cent in America in 2023, and several confectionery giants have warned that such goods are likely to become still more expensive over the coming year. In theory, this should depress demand.

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