March 28, 2007 Agronomy

NGCA: Corn Prices Have Little to No Effect on Food Prices

The recent increase in corn prices is unlikely to have significant effects on consumer food prices, according to a report released today by the National Corn Growers Association (NCGA).

This report summarizes key results of a private study conducted for NCGA by Advanced Economic Solutions and also offers analysis based on information from a variety of other sources, such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

According to the report, if current corn prices recede back to historical levels because of a significant increase in production this year, there would be little or no impact on consumer food prices. The paper concludes that if corn prices remain at the $3.50-4 per bushel range for several years, consumers might experience marginal food inflation for some grocery items.

Read the full report, UNDERSTANDING THE IMPACT OF HIGHER CORN PRICES ON CONSUMER FOOD PRICES

BECOME A GLH DEALER! Earn cash, travel, product and rewards! Recent NewsNews Archives

Purdue Pest & Crop Newsletter

September 3, 2010

Here is Issue 23 of the Pest&Crop Newsletter

Agronomic Spotlights

September 2, 2010

Two more posted this week: High Night-Time Temperatures and Stalk Cannibalization in Corn Anth...

PSU: Field Crop News

August 31, 2010

In this issue:

OSU: C.O.R.N. Newsletter

August 31, 2010

C.O.R.N. Newsletter 2010-28 08/31/10-09/07/10 Editor: Andrew Kleinschmidt

SDS-Resistant Soybeans on the Horizon

August 30, 2010

An ancient offshoot of soybeans may one day provide resistance to sudden death syndrome (SDS) and soybean rust, University of Illinois scientists reported at the recent U of I Agronomy Day.

View Additional News »