China faces the possibility
of a 4.8 million ton grain shortage in 2010, almost 9 percent of
the country's grain consumption, according to the Study Times, a newspaper
affiliated to the Party School of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of China.
If the prediction is accurate, the country will
significantly undershoot its grain security target according to
which domestic supplies must make up 95 percent of
needs.
The supply of domestic grain will be insufficient for
the next 15 years, making the country increasingly reliant on
imports and putting upward pressure on grain prices, said the
report.
It is difficult for China to raise grain output
because arable land shrank from 131 million hectares in 1996 to 123
million hectares in 2005 and the trend is hard to
reverse.
Grain prices on the domestic market will be affected
by fluctuations on the international market as China continues to
be a net importer of grain. Trade in grain has grown rapidly since
the country entered the World Trade Organization.
Rising grain prices are creating a knock-on effect for
other prices. Food, in which grain is a key component, represents a
third of China's consumer price index (CPI).
Last year, grain prices grew one percent in January,
3.7 percent in October and 4.7 percent in November when the CPI
jumped 1.9 percent, the highest rise of the year.
But it is not all bad news. The report claims that
higher grain prices will be tempered by a seven-year record high
grain output of 490 billion kilograms in 2006, not to mention the
50 billion kilograms of grain reserves, said the report.
(Xinhua News Agency January 25, 2007)
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