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Grain trade

The grain trade refers to the local and international trade in cereals such as wheat, barley, maize, and rice, and other food grains. Grain is an important trade item because it is easily stored and transported with limited spoilage, unlike other agricultural products. Healthy grain supply and trade is important to many societies, providing a caloric base for most food systems as well as important role in animal feed for animal agriculture.

The grain trade is as old as agricultural settlement, identified in many of the early cultures that adopted sedentary farming. Major societal changes have been directly connected to the grain trade, such as the fall of the Roman Empire. From the early modern period onward, grain trade has been an important part of colonial expansion and international power dynamics. The geopolitical dominance of countries like Australia, the United States, Canada and the Soviet Union during the 20th century was connected with their status as grain surplus countries.

More recently, international commodity markets have been an important part of the dynamics of food systems and grain pricing. Speculation, as well as other compounding production and supply factors leading up to the 2007-2008 financial crises, created rapid inflation of grain prices during the 2007–2008 world food price crisis. More recently, the dominance of Ukraine and Russia in grain markets such as wheat meant that the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 caused increased fears of a global food crises in 2022. Changes to agriculture caused by climate change are expected to have cascading effects on global grain markets.[1][2][3][4]

History edit

 
Ancient Egyptian art depicting a worker filling a grain silo
 
Ancient Roman grain

The grain trade is probably nearly as old as grain growing, going back the Neolithic Revolution (around 9,500 BCE). Wherever there is a scarcity of land (e.g. cities), people must bring in food from outside to sustain themselves, either by force or by trade. However, many farmers throughout history (and today) have operated at the subsistence level, meaning they produce for household needs and have little leftover to trade. The goal for such farmers is not to specialize in one crop and grow a surplus of it, but rather to produce everything his family needs and become self-sufficient. Only in places and eras where production is geared towards producing a surplus for trade (commercial agriculture), does a major grain trade become possible.

Classical world edit

In the ancient world, grain regularly flowed from the hinterlands to the cores of great empires: maize in ancient Mexico, rice in ancient China, and wheat and barley in the ancient Near East. With this came improving technologies for storing and transporting grains; the Hebrew Bible makes frequent mention of ancient Egypt's massive grain silos.

Merchant shipping was important for the carriage of grain in the classical period (and continues to be so). A Roman merchant ship could carry a cargo of grain the length of the Mediterranean for the cost of moving the same amount 15 miles by land. The large cities of the time could not exist without the supplies delivered. For example, in the first three centuries AD, Rome consumed about 150,000 tons of Egyptian grain each year.[5]: 297 

During the classical age, the unification of China and the pacification of the Mediterranean basin by the Roman Empire created vast regional markets in commodities at either end of Eurasia. The grain supply to the city of Rome was considered to be of the utmost strategic importance to Roman generals and politicians.

 
The American Elevator and Grain Trade periodical front cover of 1904

In Europe, with the fall of the Roman Empire and the rise of feudalism, many farmers were reduced to a subsistence level, producing only enough to fulfill their obligation to their lord and the Church, with little for themselves, and even less for trading. The little that was traded was moved around locally at regular fairs.

Early modern and modern expansion edit

A massive expansion in the grain trade occurred when Europeans were able to bring millions of square kilometers of new land under cultivation in the Americas, Russia, and Australia, an expansion starting in the fifteenth and lasting into the twentieth century. In addition, the consolidation of farmland in Britain and Eastern Europe, and the development of railways and the steamship shifted trade from local to more international patterns.

During this time, debate over tariffs and free trade in grain was fierce. Poor industrial workers relied on cheap bread for sustenance, but farmers wanted their government to create a higher local price to protect them from cheap foreign imports, resulting in legislation such as Britain's Corn Laws.[6]

 
A grain elevator in Indiana, United States

As Britain and other European countries industrialized and urbanized, they became net importers of grain from the various breadbaskets of the world. In many parts of Europe, as serfdom was abolished, great estates were accompanied by many inefficient smallholdings, but in the newly colonized regions massive operations were available to not only great nobles, but also to the average farmer. In the United States and Canada, the Homestead Act and the Dominion Lands Act allowed pioneers on the western plains to gain tracts of 160 acres (0.65 km2) (1/4 of a square mile) or more for little or no fee. This moved grain growing, and hence trading, to a much more massive scale. Huge grain elevators were built to take in farmers' produce and move it out via the railways to port. Transportation costs were a major concern for farmers in remote regions, however, and any technology that allowed the easier movement of grain was of great assistance; meanwhile, farmers in Europe struggled to remain competitive while operating on a much smaller scale.

 
Illustration of a Grain market in Tehran in 1893 from Harpers Magazine. Grain markets have been important centers of commerce in many parts of the world for the last 500 years.

20th century changes edit

 
Bidders at the Minneapolis Grain Exchange in 1939

In the 1920s and 1930s, farmers in Australia and Canada reacted against the pricing power of the large grain-handling and shipping companies. Their governments created the Australian Wheat Board and the Canadian Wheat Board as monopsony marketing boards, buying all the wheat in those countries for export. Together, those two boards controlled a large percentage of the world's grain trade in the mid-20th century. Additionally, farmers' cooperatives such the wheat pools became a popular alternative to the major grain companies.

At the same time in the Soviet Union and soon after in China, disastrous collectivization programs effectively turned the world's largest farming nations into net importers of grain.

 
Concrete-Central Elevator of Buffalo, New York with a 4,500,000 bushel capacity built by Monarch Engineering Company before January 1919

By the second half of the 20th century, the grain trade was divided between a few state-owned and privately owned giants. The state giants were Exportkhleb of the Soviet Union, the Canadian Wheat Board, the Australian Wheat Board, the Australian Barley Board, and so on. The largest private companies, known as the "big five", were Cargill, Continental, Louis Dreyfus, Bunge, and Andre, an older European company not to be confused with the more recent André Maggi Group from Brazil.

In 1972, the Soviet Union's wheat crop failed. To prevent shortages in their country, Soviet authorities were able to buy most of the surplus American harvest through private companies without the knowledge of the United States government. This drove up prices across the world, and was dubbed the "great grain robbery" by critics, leading to greater public attention being paid by Americans to the large trading companies.

By contrast, in 1980, the US government attempted to use its food power to punish the Soviet Union for its invasion of Afghanistan with an embargo on grain exports. This was seen as a failure in terms of foreign policy (the Soviets made up the deficit on the international market), and negatively impacted American farmers.

Modern trade edit

 
While once grain was sold by the sack, it is now moved in bulk in huge ships like this.

Since the Second World War, the trend in North America has been toward further consolidation of already vast farms. Transportation infrastructure has also promoted more economies of scale. Railways have switched from coal to diesel fuel, and introduced hopper car to carry more mass with less effort. The old wooden grain elevators have been replaced by massive concrete inland terminals, and rail transportation has retreated in the face of ever larger trucks.

 
Hopper-bottomed railcars, such are this one from Japan, have made moving grain much faster and less labour-intensive.

Modern issues affecting the grain trade include food security concerns, the increasing use of biofuels, the controversy over how to properly store and separate genetically modified and organic crops, the local food movement, the desire of developing countries to achieve market access in industrialized economies, climate change and drought shifting agricultural patterns, and the development of new crops.

Price volatility and protections edit

Price volatility greatly effects countries that are dependent on grain imports, such as certain countries in the MENA region. "Price volatility is a life-and-death issue for many people around the world" warned ICTSD Senior Fellow Sergio Marchi. "Trade policies need to incentivize investment in developing country agriculture, so that poor farmers can build resistance to future price shocks".[7] Two major price volatility crises in the early 21st century, during the 2007–2008 world food price crisis and 2022 food crises, have had major negative effects on grain prices globally. Climate change is expected to create major agricultural failures, that will continue to create volatile food price markets especially for bulk goods like grains.[2]

 
A politician, Manish Tewari, visiting a grain market in the important Punjab region of India, frequently described as the breadbasket of India. India's relation to the international grain market, was an important part of the 2020–2021 Indian farmers' protest -- with many of the more active protests in the Punjab region.

Protection against international market prices has been an important part of how some countries have responded to the volitility of market prices. For example, farmers in the European Union, United States and Japan are protected by agricultural subsidies. The European Union's programs are organized under the Common Agricultural Policy. The agricultural policy of the United States is demonstrated through the "farm bill", while rice production in Japan is also protected and subsidized. Farmers in other countries has attempted to have these policies disallowed by the World Trade Organization, or attempted to negotiate them away though the Cairns Group, at the same time the wheat boards have been reformed and many tariffs have been greatly reduced, leading to a further globalization of the industry. For example, in 2008 Mexico was required by the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to remove its tariffs on US and Canadian maize.

Similarly, protections in other contexts, such as guaranteed prices for grains in India, have been an important lifeline for small farmers in the context of further industrialization of agriculture. When the BJP Party government of Narendra Modi attempted to repeal guaranteed prices for farmers on key grains like wheat, farmers throughout the country rose in protest.[8][9][10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pei, Qing; Zhang, David Dian; Xu, Jingjing (August 2014). "Price responses of grain market under climate change in pre-industrial Western Europe by ARX modelling". 2014 4th International Conference on Simulation and Modeling Methodologies, Technologies and Applications (SIMULTECH): 811–817. doi:10.5220/0005025208110817. ISBN 978-989-758-038-3. S2CID 8045747.
  2. ^ a b "Climate Change Is Likely to Devastate the Global Food Supply". Time. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  3. ^ "CLIMATE CHANGE LINKED TO GLOBAL RISE IN FOOD PRICES – Climate Change". Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  4. ^ Lustgarten, Abrahm (16 December 2020). "How Russia Wins the Climate Crisis". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  5. ^ Casson, Lionel (1995). Ships and seamanship in the ancient world. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-5130-0.
  6. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Grain Trade". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 322–325.
  7. ^ Food price spikes put the spotlight on the need for sustained commitment to agriculture, International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development, 1 June 2010.
  8. ^ Singh, Prashasti, ed. (28 September 2020). "Farmers across India protest against farm bills. In photos". Hindustan Times. from the original on 5 October 2020. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  9. ^ "PM Modi reaches out to farmers amid anger". Hindustan Times. 28 September 2020. from the original on 8 October 2020. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  10. ^ Mathur, Swati (28 September 2020). "Farm bills 2020: President Kovind gives assent to controversial farm bills, laws come into force immediately". The Times of India. from the original on 3 October 2020. Retrieved 7 October 2020.

Works cited edit

  • W. Broehl, Cargill Going Global, University of New England Press, 1998.
  • W. Broehl, Cargill Trading the World's Grain, University of New England Press, 1992.
  • Chad J. Mitcham, China's Economic Relations with the West and Japan, 1949-79: Grain, Trade and Diplomacy, Routledge, 2005.
  • Dan Morgan, Merchants of Grain, Viking, 1997.
  • W.E. Morriss, Chosen Instrument: A History of the Canadian Wheat Board, the McIvor Years, Canadian Wheat Board, 1987

grain, trade, grain, trade, refers, local, international, trade, cereals, such, wheat, barley, maize, rice, other, food, grains, grain, important, trade, item, because, easily, stored, transported, with, limited, spoilage, unlike, other, agricultural, products. The grain trade refers to the local and international trade in cereals such as wheat barley maize and rice and other food grains Grain is an important trade item because it is easily stored and transported with limited spoilage unlike other agricultural products Healthy grain supply and trade is important to many societies providing a caloric base for most food systems as well as important role in animal feed for animal agriculture The grain trade is as old as agricultural settlement identified in many of the early cultures that adopted sedentary farming Major societal changes have been directly connected to the grain trade such as the fall of the Roman Empire From the early modern period onward grain trade has been an important part of colonial expansion and international power dynamics The geopolitical dominance of countries like Australia the United States Canada and the Soviet Union during the 20th century was connected with their status as grain surplus countries More recently international commodity markets have been an important part of the dynamics of food systems and grain pricing Speculation as well as other compounding production and supply factors leading up to the 2007 2008 financial crises created rapid inflation of grain prices during the 2007 2008 world food price crisis More recently the dominance of Ukraine and Russia in grain markets such as wheat meant that the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 caused increased fears of a global food crises in 2022 Changes to agriculture caused by climate change are expected to have cascading effects on global grain markets 1 2 3 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Classical world 1 2 Early modern and modern expansion 1 3 20th century changes 2 Modern trade 2 1 Price volatility and protections 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Works citedHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Ancient Egyptian art depicting a worker filling a grain silo nbsp Ancient Roman grainThe grain trade is probably nearly as old as grain growing going back the Neolithic Revolution around 9 500 BCE Wherever there is a scarcity of land e g cities people must bring in food from outside to sustain themselves either by force or by trade However many farmers throughout history and today have operated at the subsistence level meaning they produce for household needs and have little leftover to trade The goal for such farmers is not to specialize in one crop and grow a surplus of it but rather to produce everything his family needs and become self sufficient Only in places and eras where production is geared towards producing a surplus for trade commercial agriculture does a major grain trade become possible Classical world edit In the ancient world grain regularly flowed from the hinterlands to the cores of great empires maize in ancient Mexico rice in ancient China and wheat and barley in the ancient Near East With this came improving technologies for storing and transporting grains the Hebrew Bible makes frequent mention of ancient Egypt s massive grain silos Merchant shipping was important for the carriage of grain in the classical period and continues to be so A Roman merchant ship could carry a cargo of grain the length of the Mediterranean for the cost of moving the same amount 15 miles by land The large cities of the time could not exist without the supplies delivered For example in the first three centuries AD Rome consumed about 150 000 tons of Egyptian grain each year 5 297 During the classical age the unification of China and the pacification of the Mediterranean basin by the Roman Empire created vast regional markets in commodities at either end of Eurasia The grain supply to the city of Rome was considered to be of the utmost strategic importance to Roman generals and politicians nbsp The American Elevator and Grain Trade periodical front cover of 1904In Europe with the fall of the Roman Empire and the rise of feudalism many farmers were reduced to a subsistence level producing only enough to fulfill their obligation to their lord and the Church with little for themselves and even less for trading The little that was traded was moved around locally at regular fairs Early modern and modern expansion edit A massive expansion in the grain trade occurred when Europeans were able to bring millions of square kilometers of new land under cultivation in the Americas Russia and Australia an expansion starting in the fifteenth and lasting into the twentieth century In addition the consolidation of farmland in Britain and Eastern Europe and the development of railways and the steamship shifted trade from local to more international patterns During this time debate over tariffs and free trade in grain was fierce Poor industrial workers relied on cheap bread for sustenance but farmers wanted their government to create a higher local price to protect them from cheap foreign imports resulting in legislation such as Britain s Corn Laws 6 nbsp A grain elevator in Indiana United StatesAs Britain and other European countries industrialized and urbanized they became net importers of grain from the various breadbaskets of the world In many parts of Europe as serfdom was abolished great estates were accompanied by many inefficient smallholdings but in the newly colonized regions massive operations were available to not only great nobles but also to the average farmer In the United States and Canada the Homestead Act and the Dominion Lands Act allowed pioneers on the western plains to gain tracts of 160 acres 0 65 km2 1 4 of a square mile or more for little or no fee This moved grain growing and hence trading to a much more massive scale Huge grain elevators were built to take in farmers produce and move it out via the railways to port Transportation costs were a major concern for farmers in remote regions however and any technology that allowed the easier movement of grain was of great assistance meanwhile farmers in Europe struggled to remain competitive while operating on a much smaller scale nbsp Illustration of a Grain market in Tehran in 1893 from Harpers Magazine Grain markets have been important centers of commerce in many parts of the world for the last 500 years 20th century changes edit nbsp Bidders at the Minneapolis Grain Exchange in 1939In the 1920s and 1930s farmers in Australia and Canada reacted against the pricing power of the large grain handling and shipping companies Their governments created the Australian Wheat Board and the Canadian Wheat Board as monopsony marketing boards buying all the wheat in those countries for export Together those two boards controlled a large percentage of the world s grain trade in the mid 20th century Additionally farmers cooperatives such the wheat pools became a popular alternative to the major grain companies At the same time in the Soviet Union and soon after in China disastrous collectivization programs effectively turned the world s largest farming nations into net importers of grain nbsp Concrete Central Elevator of Buffalo New York with a 4 500 000 bushel capacity built by Monarch Engineering Company before January 1919By the second half of the 20th century the grain trade was divided between a few state owned and privately owned giants The state giants were Exportkhleb of the Soviet Union the Canadian Wheat Board the Australian Wheat Board the Australian Barley Board and so on The largest private companies known as the big five were Cargill Continental Louis Dreyfus Bunge and Andre an older European company not to be confused with the more recent Andre Maggi Group from Brazil In 1972 the Soviet Union s wheat crop failed To prevent shortages in their country Soviet authorities were able to buy most of the surplus American harvest through private companies without the knowledge of the United States government This drove up prices across the world and was dubbed the great grain robbery by critics leading to greater public attention being paid by Americans to the large trading companies By contrast in 1980 the US government attempted to use its food power to punish the Soviet Union for its invasion of Afghanistan with an embargo on grain exports This was seen as a failure in terms of foreign policy the Soviets made up the deficit on the international market and negatively impacted American farmers Modern trade edit nbsp While once grain was sold by the sack it is now moved in bulk in huge ships like this Since the Second World War the trend in North America has been toward further consolidation of already vast farms Transportation infrastructure has also promoted more economies of scale Railways have switched from coal to diesel fuel and introduced hopper car to carry more mass with less effort The old wooden grain elevators have been replaced by massive concrete inland terminals and rail transportation has retreated in the face of ever larger trucks nbsp Hopper bottomed railcars such are this one from Japan have made moving grain much faster and less labour intensive Modern issues affecting the grain trade include food security concerns the increasing use of biofuels the controversy over how to properly store and separate genetically modified and organic crops the local food movement the desire of developing countries to achieve market access in industrialized economies climate change and drought shifting agricultural patterns and the development of new crops Price volatility and protections edit Price volatility greatly effects countries that are dependent on grain imports such as certain countries in the MENA region Price volatility is a life and death issue for many people around the world warned ICTSD Senior Fellow Sergio Marchi Trade policies need to incentivize investment in developing country agriculture so that poor farmers can build resistance to future price shocks 7 Two major price volatility crises in the early 21st century during the 2007 2008 world food price crisis and 2022 food crises have had major negative effects on grain prices globally Climate change is expected to create major agricultural failures that will continue to create volatile food price markets especially for bulk goods like grains 2 nbsp A politician Manish Tewari visiting a grain market in the important Punjab region of India frequently described as the breadbasket of India India s relation to the international grain market was an important part of the 2020 2021 Indian farmers protest with many of the more active protests in the Punjab region Protection against international market prices has been an important part of how some countries have responded to the volitility of market prices For example farmers in the European Union United States and Japan are protected by agricultural subsidies The European Union s programs are organized under the Common Agricultural Policy The agricultural policy of the United States is demonstrated through the farm bill while rice production in Japan is also protected and subsidized Farmers in other countries has attempted to have these policies disallowed by the World Trade Organization or attempted to negotiate them away though the Cairns Group at the same time the wheat boards have been reformed and many tariffs have been greatly reduced leading to a further globalization of the industry For example in 2008 Mexico was required by the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA to remove its tariffs on US and Canadian maize Similarly protections in other contexts such as guaranteed prices for grains in India have been an important lifeline for small farmers in the context of further industrialization of agriculture When the BJP Party government of Narendra Modi attempted to repeal guaranteed prices for farmers on key grains like wheat farmers throughout the country rose in protest 8 9 10 See also editBread of Ukraine Monoculture Cash cropReferences edit Pei Qing Zhang David Dian Xu Jingjing August 2014 Price responses of grain market under climate change in pre industrial Western Europe by ARX modelling 2014 4th International Conference on Simulation and Modeling Methodologies Technologies and Applications SIMULTECH 811 817 doi 10 5220 0005025208110817 ISBN 978 989 758 038 3 S2CID 8045747 a b Climate Change Is Likely to Devastate the Global Food Supply Time Retrieved 2 April 2022 CLIMATE CHANGE LINKED TO GLOBAL RISE IN FOOD PRICES Climate Change Retrieved 2 April 2022 Lustgarten Abrahm 16 December 2020 How Russia Wins the Climate Crisis The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2 April 2022 Casson Lionel 1995 Ships and seamanship in the ancient world Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 5130 0 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Grain Trade Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 322 325 Food price spikes put the spotlight on the need for sustained commitment to agriculture International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development 1 June 2010 Singh Prashasti ed 28 September 2020 Farmers across India protest against farm bills In photos Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 5 October 2020 Retrieved 7 October 2020 PM Modi reaches out to farmers amid anger Hindustan Times 28 September 2020 Archived from the original on 8 October 2020 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Mathur Swati 28 September 2020 Farm bills 2020 President Kovind gives assent to controversial farm bills laws come into force immediately The Times of India Archived from the original on 3 October 2020 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Works cited edit W Broehl Cargill Going Global University of New England Press 1998 W Broehl Cargill Trading the World s Grain University of New England Press 1992 Chad J Mitcham China s Economic Relations with the West and Japan 1949 79 Grain Trade and Diplomacy Routledge 2005 Dan Morgan Merchants of Grain Viking 1997 W E Morriss Chosen Instrument A History of the Canadian Wheat Board the McIvor Years Canadian Wheat Board 1987 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grain trade amp oldid 1205753509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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