Food Industry Trends 2023

市場監測

  • 澳大利亞,
  • 奧地利,
  • 比利時,
  • 巴西,
  • 加拿大,
  • 中國,
  • 捷克,
  • 丹麥,
  • 丹麥,
  • 法國,
  • 德國,
  • 香港,
  • 匈牙利,
  • 印度,
  • 印尼,
  • 愛爾蘭,
  • 意大利,
  • 日本,
  • 馬來西亞,
  • 墨西哥,
  • 荷蘭,
  • 新西蘭,
  • 挪威,
  • 菲律賓,
  • 波蘭,
  • 葡萄牙,
  • 新加坡,
  • 斯洛伐克,
  • 韓國,
  • 西班牙,
  • 瑞典,
  • 瑞士,
  • 台灣,
  • 泰國,
  • 土耳其,
  • 阿拉伯聯合酋長國,
  • 美國,
  • 英國,
  • 越南
  • 食品

2023年11月09日

Global demand for non-essential food products shrinks amid squeeze on household incomes

This year, with the sole exception of Asia-Pacific, we expect to see a slowdown in food and beverages output on a global scale. Output will increase by just 1.4% and sector investment will grow by 4.3%, down from 6.5% in 2022.

There are several factors keeping prices high and leading consumers to cut back on non-essential food items. Primary among these are supply challenges, much of which have been impacted by the war in Ukraine. With the non-extension of the Russia-Ukraine grain deal, the impact of the war on the global food industry remains severe. Ukraine accounts for 4% of global wheat supply, 13% of corn, and more than a third of the global sunflower oil trade.

Fertiliser shortages are also a challenge. High gas prices in 2022 hampered production in Europe, while Russian fertiliser exports decreased sharply due to sanctions. Farmers and food producers in developing countries are especially affected by the lagged effect of the 2022 fertiliser price spike.

 

 

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