Yellen calls on international community to mitigate global hunger crisis
Grain prices are rising at a particularly bad time for poor countries who rely on imports. Droughts have ravaged domestic supplies, and their national currencies don’t buy as much as they did last year.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned of mounting economic troubles — in particular, soaring global food and energy prices, and slowing growth — from Russia’s war in Ukraine and resulting supply-chain disruptions. She spoke yesterday in Bonn, Germany, ahead of the G-7 meeting this weekend.
The U.S. Treasury Department meanwhile has announced new initiatives and billions in aid — in coordination with other governments and international development banks — to try and prevent food shortages, food insecurity and hunger from spreading in the poorest nations.
Global food prices are up 30% in the last year, according to the U.N. That’s a disaster for poor countries – they depend on food purchased on the global market to feed their people.
And Cornell University trade expert Eswar Prasad said with interest rates rising, poor countries’ currencies are depreciating.
“Many of these countries are facing a double-whammy, because food prices are rising, and in terms of their own currencies, they’re rising even more,” said Prasad. So they can’t afford to buy as much food as they used to.
Meanwhile, said Columbia Business School economist Gernot Wagner, many developing countries were “already experiencing droughts because of climate change, and were relying more on grain imports, now suddenly global grain prices are going through the roof.”
Wagner sees one sign of hope in the small decline in global food prices in April. And Prasad says the international community’s focus on the problem might not help right away, but it can’t hurt.