High cost of imported fertilizers is adding to food crisis in Africa

High cost of imported fertilizers is adding to food crisis in Africa

Global fertilizer suppliers have benefited from high fertilizer prices in 2022-23 but, by and large, they have undermined production, contributed to high food prices, and exacerbated food insecurity, according to experts.
Global fertilizer suppliers made incredibly high profits in 2022/23 on the back of price spikes attributed to the Russia-Ukraine war, as the profits of the world’s top nine producers trebled in 2022 from two years previously, according to two economists, Simon Roberts and Ntombifuthi Tshabalala, both from the University of Johannesburg. But the margins and impacts have been even greater on fertilizer supplies to African farmers. Moreover, the super-high profit margins are being sustained in 2023 in many African countries even while international prices have come down. Meanwhile, they say that the harvest season has recently come to an end in most countries in southern Africa with farmer margins and production being squeezed by high input costs.
The wide gaps between fertilizer prices in the region and international fertilizer prices point to major issues within the supply chain with excess margins of some 30%-80% being earned on sales to many African countries. Both economists’ research focuses on fertilizer and agri-food markets in the African Market Observatory, which points to major problems with how international and regional markets work, including the market power of large international suppliers. High prices for fertilizer inputs are squeezing African farmers who are cutting back on fertilizer use meaning low yields and supply, and high food prices. Both experts thus call for an international action that is therefore urgently required on fertilizer prices to improve food security in Africa.

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