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Focus on food prices
BBC
News
Envoys
from 26 Latin American and Caribbean countries met on Friday to
discuss the rising cost of food and draw up a united policy for
the region.
The talks in
Caracas, Venezuela, marked the beginning of a week of meetings on
the issue, leading up to a three-day UN food crisis summit in Rome
on Tuesday.
According to the
World Bank, global food prices have risen by 83% over the past three
years.
The lender has announced a
package of food grants totalling $1.2bn (£608m).
An influential report on
Thursday warned that higher food prices might be here to stay as
demand from developing countries and production costs rose.
Prices would fall, but only
gradually, the report by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation
and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) said.
Food grants
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Haitians had been hardest hit
by rising food prices in the Caribbean |
Haiti's political fall-out has
been the most high-profile.
Food riots led to the sacking of
prime minister Jacques Edouard Alexis.
Since then, the World Bank has
announced increasingly large donations to help feed Haitians.
The BBC's James Ingham, in the
Venezuelan capital, says that like much of the rest of the
developing world, Latin America's poor have not escaped from the
increased food prices.
While some countries are working
together to tackle the crisis, there has been no united response and
the meeting will aim to correct that, he says.
At a recent summit held with
European leaders, American heads of state pledged to strengthen
trade relations.
However, an alternative
"people's summit" held by social movements said liberalisation and
deregulation were the principal causes of poverty.
Some of the region's left-wing
governments share that view and are focusing on reducing their
reliance on imports, creating an agricultural development fund to
help achieve this.
In preparation for the
UN-sponsored food crisis summit in Rome next week, the World Bank
said there was "the need for a clear action plan".
As part of its package it is
setting aside grants worth a total of $200m for "high-priority"
countries most at risk from acute hunger.
The World Bank says 100 million
people could be impoverished by the rising cost and scarcer
availability of food.
Fuel protests
Thursday's joint report by the
UN and OECD believes the current price spike is higher than previous
records, partly due to bad weather ruining crops.
But factors such as rising
biofuel demand and speculation will keep future costs high, it adds.
Fuel prices have also been
rising dramatically and the European Union braced for fresh strikes
by fishermen on Friday.
Trade unions say the cost of
diesel oil has become prohibitively high and that many fishermen are
being forced to give up a lifelong profession.
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