STEVE MOORE: Politicians are blaming the wrong villain for Americas rising food prices

When food prices rise, politicians and activists alike instinctively look for a villain to blame.Amid current instability, many will be tempted to settle on domestic manufacturers as the scapegoat for skyrocketing prices.

This narrative might be politically convenient for some, but it gets the economics of global supply chains exactly backwards.The real reason the price of key inputs in American food supply — like fertilizer — is rising is not corporate greed or mismanagement.It is a combination of global disruptions, geopolitical instability, and misguided government policies both here and abroad.

All of these factors have come together to make it harder to produce the inputs on which American agriculture relies.Fertilizer, for example, is one of the most important building blocks of the global food supply chain.Without it, crop yields fall.

When crop yields fall, food production also declines, causing grocery bills to rise.Yet fertilizer does not appear out of thin air.

It relies on a complex combination of materials such as sulfur, ammonia and phosphate rock.TRUMP DECLARES FOOD SUPPLY EMERGENCY, SUSPENDS TARIFFS ON KEY FERTILIZER IMPORTSThese raw materials are sourced from all corners of the world and rely on international transportation networks.Many of these supply chains are currently under significant stress.The ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine continues to disrupt key commodity markets and trade routes.

Russia produced 7.5 million metric tons of sulfur last year, making it the third-largest producer in the world.This is because Russia is an oil-rich nation, and sulfur is a byproduct of oil refining.

Lately, Ukrainian drone strikes on Russia’s oil and fertilizer infrastructure have drastically cut Russia’s ability to supply the world with sulfur.Russia’s ammonia exports have also fallen to roughly 80% below pre-war levels.IRAN WARNS SHIPS OF 'FORCEFUL RESPONSE' AS US-BACKED HORMUZ ROUTE CHALLENGES TEHRAN'S GRIPTensions in the Middle Eas...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: Fox News

Recent Articles