By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Agriculture News - Mekong FarmerAgriculture News - Mekong FarmerAgriculture News - Mekong Farmer
  • Home
  • Technology
    TechnologyShow More
    Agtech Seedlings: Bonsai Robotics secures $15M to advance automated fruit harvesters
    By nhanongen
    Deere loses appeal against Agco in patent dispute over precision planting technology
    By nhanongen
    Investment in agtech startups plummeted in 2024
    By nhanongen
    Mekong Farmer to stop publishing
    By nhanongen
    Agtech Seedlings: CH4 Global to expand methane-reducing cattle feed with Mitsubishi
    By nhanongen
  • Mekong Deta
    Mekong Deta
    Show More
    Top News
    Farmers growing jicama are at risk of losing money because prices have plummeted
    07/06/2024
    Thousands of pots of Tet raspberry chrysanthemums were thrown away because of slow flowering
    13/11/2024
    Feed wild boar with fruit
    04/06/2024
    Latest News
    Dr. loves fattening ‘jackfruit’ in Ca Mau
    13/05/2025
    Dr. loves ‘fattening’ crab like Ca Mau
    13/05/2025
    Dr. loves fattening, making crabs in Ca Mau
    13/05/2025
    Farmers with rice died next to Can Tho – Ca Mau highway were compensated
    05/05/2025
  • Supply Chain
    Supply ChainShow More
    Meat giant JBS breaks into the egg business
    By nhanongen
    Zeldin is confirmed as the new EPA administrator. What’s next?
    By nhanongen
    US detects rare bird flu strain H5N9 in poultry for first time
    By nhanongen
    Lend an ear: Corn-based material introduced for biodegradable packaging
    By nhanongen
    Why an independent grocer is holding the line on egg prices
    By nhanongen
  • Meat
    MeatShow More
    Cargill, Foster Farms to close turkey plants as demand wanes
    By nhanongen
    Cargill, Foster Farms to close turkey plants as demand wanes
    By nhanongen
    Smithfield raises 25% less than expected in muted IPO
    By nhanongen
    Egg prices could break more records in 2025
    By nhanongen
    USDA slow to update food safety standards for meat and poultry, watchdog finds
    By nhanongen
  • Agri Products Price
    Agri Products Price
    Update Agri Products Price: Coffee, Pepper, Rice, Durian, Jackfruit
    Show More
    Top News
    Pepper prices on 06/16/2024: Mixed movements
    17/06/2024
    The price of raw Salanganes Nest decreased to 516
    09/07/2024
    Sharp reversal and a significant drop
    28/07/2024
    Latest News
    Sharp drop across the board
    13/05/2025
    Global market continues to rise
    12/05/2025
    Coffee prices on May 12, 2025: The market remains stable
    12/05/2025
    Pepper prices on May 12, 2025: Continue to remain unchanged
    12/05/2025
  • Markets
  • Regulations
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Agriculture News - Mekong FarmerAgriculture News - Mekong Farmer
Font ResizerAa
  • Agri Products Price
  • Meat
  • Markets
  • Mekong Deta
  • Technology
  • Supply Chain
  • Categories
    • Mekong Deta
    • Markets
    • Agri Products Price
    • Meat
    • Technology
    • Supply Chain
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Follow US
Blog > Agri Products Price > Overall food prices to rise 3 to 5% next year
Agri Products Price

Overall food prices to rise 3 to 5% next year

nhanongen
Last updated: 06/12/2024 11:14 AM
By nhanongen
Share
7 Min Read
SHARE



(VAN) A family of four could pay $800 more for groceries in 2025 because of climate change, labour challenges, new policies and geopolitical events, says a report published Thursday.

A man selects fresh tomatoes at a Brampton, Ont. grocery store, on Nov. 1.

A man selects fresh tomatoes at a Brampton, Ont. grocery store, on Nov. 1.

The 2025 Food Price Report used artificial-intelligence modelling, combined with expert input, to forecast overall food-price increases of 3 to 5 per cent next year. Meat is predicted to increase by up to 6 per cent, followed by vegetables and restaurant bills at 5 per cent. The report predicted increases of only 1 to 3 per cent for fruit and seafood.

Last year, the report, which is in its 15th year, predicted an overall food-price increase of 2.5 per cent to 4.5 per cent, in line with latest data from Statistics Canada. However, questions remain about how accurate predictive models – even those using the latest in AI to comb through vast quantities of data – can be during periods of intense volatility.

Any number of unexpected events could threaten global food production and supply chains, for example extreme weather or the major tariffs proposed by U.S. president-elect Donald Trump.

The food price report, a collaboration between experts at three universities and the Vector Institute for Artificial Intelligence, used data stretching back to 1986 from the Consumer Price Index, among other sources. This information was crossed with data on the impact of changes in domestic policy, geopolitical strategy and climate to forecast food prices in 2025.

The report forecasts that, at an annual cost of $4,809, a boy between 14 and 18 years old will be the most expensive type of Canadian to feed, followed by a pregnant woman under 18. The average family of four – a man, woman, girl and boy – will spend around $16,800 on food in 2025, compared with $16,000 in 2024. One man and one woman, both over 50, will spend around $8,000 on food in 2025, the report says.

These calculations assume that Canadians are making and eating food at home, and do not include service expenses, such as delivery fees.

The analysis veered toward a worst-case scenario, said Kristina Kupferschmidt, an author of the report and researcher at the University of Prince Edward Island’s school of mathematical and computational sciences.

“We did try to overpredict rather than underpredict because the consequences are so high for the average Canadian as they’re budgeting,” she said. In 2024, for example, a number of food prices fell below the worst-case predictions.

However, the report, based on historical data, doesn’t account for unprecedented events, said Evan Fraser, an author on the report and director of the Arrell Food Institute at the University of Guelph.

For example, on Nov. 26 the Canadian dollar dropped to its lowest level in four years after Mr. Trump’s announcement that he would impose 25-per-cent tariffs on Canadian imports. A weaker Canadian dollar would increase the cost of food that crosses the border alongside boosting the cost of U.S. products essential to Canadian farming operations, the report said.

This is just one example of how novel factors could radically alter the cost of food.

For decades, food economists have predicted the cost of food based on three underlying assumptions: oil would be cheap; it would be easy to move people, ideas and food across borders; and weather would follow reasonably predictable patterns, Mr. Fraser said.

When one of these factors changed – for example in the OPEC oil crisis of the 1970s – food prices globally veered into unpredictable territory, he said. However, Canadians are now facing volatility on all three fronts.

“The last 10 days in particular and events over the past five years have made me really worried that sometimes we’re underestimating the scale of the problem that we’re facing,” Mr. Fraser said.

“The only thing that will be surprising is stability.”

Other examples of price changes owing to extreme events include the increased cost of olive oil, beef or Sriracha – a popular hot-pepper condiment – as a result of various worldwide droughts, said Michael von Massow, a food economist at the University of Guelph who was not involved in the 2025 food price report. And further potential Trump policies – notably the mass deportation of illegal immigrants – would radically disrupt the agricultural labour force in key sectors such as vegetables and meat processing.

“The only thing that is for sure is that food prices are going to be more variable than in the past,” Mr. von Massow said.

To combat high prices – and hedge against this volatile climate – consumers might change their purchasing habits. For example, they could switch beef (which has increased by 9.2 per cent since September, 2023) for other sources of protein, such as fish or pork, the report said.

However, Mr. Fraser says the onus to make food affordable shouldn’t land only at consumers’ feet.

“We need to be more thoughtful and more ambitious as a nation about where food fits and how we prioritize it and how we invest in it.”



Agriculture News | Agri Products Price

- Advertisement -
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print

Fast Four Quiz: Precision Medicine in Cancer

How much do you know about precision medicine in cancer? Test your knowledge with this quick quiz.
Get Started
Japan’s push to lower rice prices coming in baby steps

(VAN) Japan's efforts to lower the price of rice through the…

The US Embassy in Vietnam aims to elevate ‘fruit diplomacy’

The concept of 'fruit diplomacy' between Vietnam and the United States…

Cooperative’s organic pepper sells at VND 15 million/kg

(VAN) After efforts for certifications, Bau May pepper products are priced…

- Advertisement -

Your one-stop resource for medical news and education.

Your one-stop resource for medical news and education.
Sign Up for Free

You Might Also Like

Agri Products Price

Sharp drop across the board

By nhanongen
Agri Products Price

Global market continues to rise

By nhanongen
Agri Products Price

Coffee prices on May 12, 2025: The market remains stable

By nhanongen
Agri Products Price

Pepper prices on May 12, 2025: Continue to remain unchanged

By nhanongen
Facebook Twitter Youtube
Giá cả nông sản
Mekong Delta News
Agriculture News
Agri Products Price
Categories
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Mekong Deta
  • Supply Chain
  • Meat
  • Agri Products Price
  • Markets
  • Regulations
Nhà Nông Miền Tây
  • Giá cà phê hôm nay
  • Giá lúa gạo hôm nay
  • Giá mít ruột đỏ hôm nay
  • Giá mít thái hôm nay
  • Giá phân bón hôm nay
  • Giá sầu riêng hôm nay
  • Giá tiêu hôm nay
  • Giá xoài hôm nay
  • Giá thuốc bảo vệ thực vật
  • Giá heo hơi hôm nay
Italy Highlights
  • Italy Highlights
  • Italy Attractions
  • Travel to Italy
  • Italy Food
  • Trip Ideas in Italy
  • Real Estate in Italy
  • Crypto News
  • Finances News
  • Investing News
  • Economic News
Architecture Concept
  • Architecture Concept
  • Interior Design
  • Landscape Design
  • Bath Products
  • Kitchen Products
  • Home Renovating
  • Architecture Project
  • Lighting Design
  • Mekong Farmer
  • Mekong News
Thị trường nông sản

© 2024 Mekong Farmer
– Agriculture News.
A member of Nhanongmientay.com

© 2024 Mekong Farmer - Agriculture News
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?