World Bank

The Fight on Food Inflation

April 14, 2008 - 4:54pm

Rioting has broken out in Egypt, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Cameroon, and Ethiopia and 33 more countries around the world may face instability due to rising food prices. During IMF/World Bank meetings last week, leaders cited the U.S. demand for bio fuels as a major reason for high grain prices. Throughout the weeklong meetings, World Bank President Robert Zoellick repeated the need for more food assistance to poor countries. To date, the United Nations has only received half of the $500 million it said it needed to sustain assistance through the World Food Program.

Snapshot asks, will cutting the U.S. demand for bio fuels sufficiently curb inflation in food prices?

World Bank - Rising food prices: policy options and World Bank Response
Wall Street Journal - Food Inflation, Riots Spark Worries for World Leaders
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development - Fighting Food Inflation through Sustainable Investment
Time - The Clean Energy Scam

Global Economic Snapshot: U.N. and World Bank Weigh Impact of U.S. Slowdown

January 9, 2008 - 7:00pm

Joining the chorus of U.S. recession-watchers, the World Bank and the U.N. jumped in with their own analysis. The World Bank sees a finite global impact, as "emerging markets will act as shock absorbers for the global economy, cushioning the impact of the US downturn and ensuring the world continues to grow at a decent rate this year," according to the Financial Times.

The U.N is not so sanguine, writes AFP: "A further slowdown in the world's major economy will hit many of the poor nations hard, as it will slow world trade and put an end to the boom in commodity prices that benefited them over the past years."

World Bank - Global Economics Prospects 2008
Financial Times - Emerging markets 'to help ease downturn'
U.N. - World Economic Situation and Prospects 2008
Agence France-Presse - US slowdown could spark global economic recession
Financial Times - U.N. warns of US recession threat

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