As Agricultural Commodities Surge, Eating Costs More (And That's Not Transitory)

 | Aug 13, 2021 06:31

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Inflation is pushing prices higher
  • Breakfast is getting pricey: Coffee and sugar rally to multi-year highs
  • Lunch costs rise: Grains remain at highest levels in years
  • Dinner skyrockets: Meats cost more in 2021
  • More increases on the horizon

Over the past weeks, many commodity prices have corrected lower. Meanwhile, all raw materials remain appreciably higher than at the 2020 lows. Over the past months, the consumer price data indicates that inflation is rising to levels not seen in years. Core CPI excludes food and energy, but any consumer will tell you the cost of filling the gas tank or shopping at the supermarket has skyrocketed.

Economists at the US Federal Reserve believe inflationary pressures are transitory. They have blamed the increase on bottlenecks in the supply chain, pointing to problems at lumber mills that sent the price of wood to an all-time high in May. More recently, a semiconductor shortage lifted car prices, leading the central bank to point to another temporary factor. However, shoppers know that the higher prices for everyday essentials are not likely to come down any time soon.

The bottom line is that it costs a lot more to eat these days, which is not likely to be a “transitory” situation. Eating has become expensive, and we could be in the early innings of trends that will take food prices far higher over the coming months and years.

h2 Inflation is pushing prices higher/h2

The May and June consumer price index data was highly inflationary. The US central bank attributed May’s rise to lumber and copper prices, which rose to record highs. In June, they pointed to the semiconductor shortage and higher new and used car prices. The Fed continues to call rising inflation a “transitory” event.

On Aug. 11, July CPI rose 5.4% from the level in July 2020. The barometer increased 0.50% on a month-over-month basis and matches consensus forecasts.

Meanwhile, core inflation excluding food and energy rose 0.3% in July, lower than the 0.4% forecasts.

Economists argue that the core CPI data is a more reliable inflation indicator because of the volatility in petroleum and food prices. Meanwhile, consumers need to eat and power their lives.

Food and energy are not luxuries; they are necessities. The latest data continues to tell us filling our vehicles and fueling our bodies continues to get more expensive each month. Inflation is taking a bite out of people’s budgets even if the Fed says it is a temporary event. The problem is that consumer prices rise a lot faster than they decline. 

h2 Breakfast is getting pricey: Coffee and sugar rally to multi-year highs/h2
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Many nutritionists say that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. It fuels our bodies to face the day’s challenges. Coffee and sugar are breakfast staples for many.