Food price inflation may slow down poverty reduction in Bangladesh

Published 2021년 11월 21일

Tridge summary

Bangladesh is experiencing a significant increase in the prices of essential food commodities and fuels due to the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Department of Agricultural Marketing has reported price surges for various vegetables, farm-raised hen, eggs, and other staple foods, some of which have seen increases as high as 106%. Fuel prices, including diesel and kerosene, have also risen by 23%, affecting transportation costs and the production value chains of commodities. This one-two punch of food and fuel price inflation is disproportionately impacting low-income households, who spend a significant portion of their income on food and are already struggling with reduced daily per capita incomes and increased poverty rates post-COVID-19. The government is urged to adopt measures such as expanding open market sales, subsidizing agricultural and poultry farming inputs, and increasing public procurement of rice to mitigate the effects of these rising prices and support the economic recovery, especially among the poverty-stricken population.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

As Bangladesh's economy is still under recovery from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, an upward trend in the prices of different commodities from the food consumption basket has been hovering over the food market lately - adding fuel to the fire. According to the Department of Agricultural Marketing, recently the prices of many essential commodities have skyrocketed. Vegetables such as local potato, carrot, red spinach (laal shak), green banana (kacha kola), Malabar spinach (pui shak), tomato, lady's finger (okra), lemon (kagji), onion etc., have experienced a significant increase in prices (between 13 per cent and 106 per cent) in early November 2021 compared to the prices at the beginning of September 2021. Prices of farm-raised hen, eggs from local hen and local ducks also noticeably grew around 10 per cent in November 2021 compared to September, 2021. Even though some food items have experienced a drastic rise in prices, others faced a relatively lower price bump. For ...

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