Africa’s dependence on wheat imports keeps bread prices high

게시됨 2026년 2월 12일

Tridge 요약

Africa remains heavily reliant on imported wheat, leaving bakeries and consumers vulnerable to global price shocks. Even though international wheat prices have fallen significantly — from peaks of $430–450 per tonne in 2022–2023 to around $240–270 per tonne in 2025 — retail bread prices across the continent have barely decreased. Major wheat-importing countries including South

원본 콘텐츠

Africa, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Nigeria, Cameroon, Morocco, Egypt, Algeria, Ivory Coast, and Mozambique source large volumes from the United States, Russia, Ukraine, and Canada. This dependence exposes African markets to geopolitical risks, potential new trade tariffs, rising shipping costs, fuel prices, and fertilizer expenses. While global wheat has become cheaper, the cost of a standard loaf of white bread in Africa still ranges from $0.80 to over $2.00, depending on the country, exchange rate fluctuations, government subsidies (or lack thereof), and local distribution costs. Bakeries face multiple additional burdens: electricity tariffs in Sub-Saharan Africa are often 2–3 times higher than the global average, frequent power cuts force the use of expensive diesel generators, and inland transport from ports to inland areas adds substantial extra costs. In countries with currency instability and foreign exchange shortages — such as Mozambique and Zimbabwe — governments sometimes ...

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