In The News

China Is Hoarding Grain And Corn Amid Global Food Shortages

China continues to stockpile large amounts of grain and corn, tightening supply and inflating prices amid global food security concerns following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In March 2022, Ukraine exported just 1.1 million tons of corn, with about 400,000 tons going to China. In comparison, corn exports totaled 2.6 million tons a year ago, with nearly half of that volume going to China, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) report released Sunday.

With Ukraine’s corn exports currently being constrained by the ongoing war, China appears to be looking elsewhere for supplies. China imported roughly 42 million tons of grain this year so far; last year it imported about 50 million tons.

China made another large purchase of U.S. corn in mid-April from private sellers which totaled 1.020 million metric tons, according to the USDA. In early April, the country made a purchase that totaled 1.084 million tons, which was China’s largest corn purchase since May 2021.

Food prices and inflation are skyrocketing in the U.S. and globally as China continues to stockpile food commodities. This year, the price of corn remains high in comparison with historical trends; the current price of corn as of June 30 is $6.8525 per bushel, up roughly $1.30 per bushel since last year.

In the U.S., the Consumer Price Index for urban consumers, a key measure of inflation, went up by 1.0% in May and rose 8.6% over the last 12 months. The index for all food and energy items increased by 0.6% in May and was up 6.0% over the entire year.

General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping said in April the country needs to be independent to achieve food security,  expressing concerns about China’s reliance on imports of food. Additionally, China’s Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs suggested the condition of China’s wheat crop yields could be the “worst in history,” in March.

China is expected to hold 69% of the world’s maize reserves in the first half of 2022, as well as 60% of rice and 51% of wheat reserves, according to data from the USDA. In recent years, China’s soybean, maize and wheat imports soared due to heavy purchasing from the U.S., Brazil and other nations.

The USDA did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org

Jack McEvoy

Share
Published by
Jack McEvoy

Recent Posts

Democrats Thought Bragg Trial Would Sink Trump’s 2024 Campaign. Polling So Far Suggests Otherwise

While Democrats may have hoped that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s prosecution of former President…

7 hours ago

Biden’s Economic ‘Malaise’ Is Starting To Resemble Jimmy Carter’s Dismal Economy

Everything that is happening in our fractured nation today seems so worrisomely reminiscent of America’s…

7 hours ago

Scientific Report Pours Cold Water On Major Talking Point Of Climate Activists

The purveyors of climate doom will not tolerate the good news of our planet thriving…

7 hours ago

Georgia Taxpayers are Latest Victims of Electric Vehicle Gambles

Taxpayers could be on the hook if electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Rivian fails to resume…

7 hours ago

Elections Should Not be Conducted In Darkness

This week, the Public Interest Legal Foundation filed two federal lawsuits in Minnesota and Wisconsin to end these states’…

15 hours ago

Who Knew A Whistle Was A Deadly Weapon

Of the 7,309 aircraft in the U.S. commercial inventory, 3,173, or 43 percent, were manufactured…

15 hours ago