I worry they are beginning to stockpile food for when this interglacial begins to end and food output drops substantially.
It was going to happen sooner or later, but since food output isnt the issue (the war supposedly is), where is it all going to? I doubt its just being thrown away.
Short term constraints on supply causing prices to move. If these don't relax before the input costs are registered (for example fertilizer normalizing before planting) then these costs get baked into the costs of goods sold
I worry they are beginning to stockpile food for when this interglacial begins to end and food output drops substantially.
It was going to happen sooner or later, but since food output isnt the issue (the war supposedly is), where is it all going to? I doubt its just being thrown away.
Short term constraints on supply causing prices to move. If these don't relax before the input costs are registered (for example fertilizer normalizing before planting) then these costs get baked into the costs of goods sold