Friday, August 14, 2015

August 14th, 2015 - The Food Reserve Agency (FRA) floor price set at K70 x 50kg bag

Zambia's Food Reserve Agency (FRA) announced its floor price yesterday, which I heard over the ZNBC news whilst enjoying a meal of rice and beans that was positively resplendent with cooking oil.

To clarify from what mi amigo Dr. William Burke told me years back, it's not really a true "floor price", or more appropriately (?), a "price floor" ... FRA's floor price is more appropriately, a pan-territorial price for a fixed weight / volume, the ubiquitous 50kg maize grain bag purchased by FRA at an approved depot or satellite depot anywhere in Zambia. This year it is ... drumroll ... K70 per 50kg bag, of which they will purchase a supposed maximum of 500,000 metric tonnes.

Hmm. As CSPR says, nothing exciting. No change from last year, especially considering two factors:


  1. USD to ZMW exchange rate ... a year ago, the Zambian Kwacha (ZMW) was trading around K6.1 to $1.00, so a bag of maize was worth approximately $11.50. Today it just closed at K7.90 to $1.00 (gulp), meaning a bag of maize is worth about $8.86. This is a kick in the slegs to farmers who don't get subsidized maize support, as fertilizer and seed prices are often estimated in USD and then converted to ZMW. 
  2. IT BARELY RAINED THIS YEAR IN THE SOUTHERN HALF OF THE COUNTRY. That means we have less maize and the FRA is paying less (in dollars) for it.
However, this is a glimmer of hope for us nut-jobs who harp on about diversification; in its own groping way, the government appears to be backing away from its deathgrip on Zambia's maizescape. It's likely (though no standing government would admit it) that their handling of maize through the FRA has been a significant distortion [read: wandering disaster] of the food market and a spectacular loss of taxpayer's money (state-to-state / donor aid usually lands in research and extension in some garbled way like moi).

We'll see ... my prediction is that maize cropping will drop somewhat depending on how well they stick to the quota of 500,000 MT, and if they are at their usual snail's pace of paying the farmers around December / January. FISP is still intact and far more of an expression of government largesse in rural areas, so it will likely stand politically.  

In the meantime ... maize grain is selling at K110 / 50kg (packed to 60-65kg) on the open market. Guess hunger and Adam Smith are moving the dial on their own ... 

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