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Malawi Faces 'Price Famine'
IRIN
(November 19, 2004) Malawi could be facing a 'price
famine' due to the impact of rising commodity prices on
its vulnerable population, according to a report by the
Famine
Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET).
[A price famine occurs when the price of food increases
so greatly that a substantial number of poor people
cannot purchase enough food to avoid hunger. Food,
however still continues to be available in the markets.]
The report noted that "the last agricultural season's
[production] shortfall will mean that more households
than normal are dependent on purchasing food for a
longer period of time"
But incomes have fallen due to last year's poor harvest,
not only reducing household ability to purchase food,
but also the ability of wealthier farmers to hire
seasonal labor known as 'ganyu'. Seasonal labor "is an
important source of income, especially for poor
households, and increasingly for middle-income
households".
Ganyu laborers are paid either in cash or food, or both.

Photo: ©
CARE
A Ganyu (seasonal farm) worker in Malawi
Given "increased labor supplies and reduced effective
demand, ganyu rates are likely to diminish over coming
months, diminishing income opportunities for poorer and
middle households. In light of this income problem,
staple food prices are an even more important
determinant of household access to food," FEWS NET
explained.
ECHOES OF 2001
In 2001/02 more than 3 million Malawians needed food
aid. Although observers blamed the crisis on two years
of severe drought, the government also came under fire
for selling off most of its emergency grain stock.
FEWS NET warned that the "situation this year could be
described as more risky than in 2001, in the sense that
the [state grain marketer] ADMARC price has been
[increased], at a time when the local market maize
prices are already higher than during the adjustment in
August 2001".
The government has announced a 70 percent increase in
ADMARC's maize price from Malawian Kwacha (MK) 10.00
(around US $0.09) per kilogram to MK 17.00 (about US
$0.16) per kilogram.
"This kind of price hike is reminiscent of 2001, when a
similar announcement triggered price hikes in the local
markets that led to the 'price famine' of that year in
Malawi, [as it is] referred to by many analysts. In
2001, the maize price increased by 240 percent in August
... to MK 17.00 per kilogram," FEWS NET said, warning
that "we may see a
repeat of the 2001 situation or even worse".
FEWS NET also criticized the timing of the ADMARC price
adjustment. "The ADMARC price has been adjusted upwards
when most of the rural households depend on purchases,
and it gets lowered when most of the farmers are selling
their crop," the organization said. "The problem ...
[is] that the ADMARC consumer price ... is used as a
bargaining tool by private traders [who] take advantage
of the government-fixed high price to charge even higher
prices for their maize."
A continued rise in prices may result in an increased
number of people needing food aid. Earlier this year the
Malawi Vulnerability Assessment Committee projected two
possible scenarios regarding the impact maize prices
could have on food security.
In the first scenario, maize prices were projected to
peak between MK 20 per kilogram and MK 23 per kilogram,
with in 1.3 million households needing food aid, FEWS
NET said. In the second scenario, maize prices were
projected to range between MK
25 per kilogram and MK 29 per kilogram. "This would
result in the worst-case scenario of 1.7 million
households requiring food aid," FEWS NET noted.
The World Food Programme spokesman in Lilongwe,
Antonella D'Aprille, told IRIN that between January and
March 2005, WFP aimed to reach 1.1 million people
through targeted food distributions, food-for-work
activities and therapeutic feeding programs.
Copyright (c) UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs 2004 IRIN. This story was
originally published by the "Africa-English" Service of
the UN's IRIN humanitarian information unit at
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.asp?ReportID=44238 ,
but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United
Nations. For further information, contact e-mail:
IRIN@ocha.unon.org or Web:
http://www.irinnews.org. If you re-print, copy,
archive or re-post this item, please retain this credit
and disclaimer. Reposting by commercial sites requires
written IRIN permission .Email: IRIN-SA@irin.org.za
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