Nations turn to barter deals to secure food!
LONDON, England - January 26, 2009 - Countries struggling to secure credit have resorted to barter and secretive government-to-government deals to buy food, with some contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
In a striking example of how the global financial crisis and high food prices have strained the finances of poor and middle-income nations, countries including Russia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Morocco say they have signed or are discussing inter-government and barter deals to import commodities from rice to vegetable oil.
The revival of these trade practices, used rarely in the last 20 years and usually by nations subject to international embargoes and the old communist bloc, is a result of these countries’ failures to secure trade financing as bank lending has dried up.
The countries have not disclosed the value of any deals, and some have refused even to confirm their existence. Officials estimate that they range from $5 million for smaller contracts to more than $500 million for the biggest.
Josette Sheeran, head of the United Nations World Food Program, said senior government officials, including heads of state, said they were facing difficulties obtaining credit to purchase food.
Last week, Malaysia’s commodities minister, Datuk Peter Chin Fah Kui, said Kuala Lumpur had already signed a barter deal swapping palm oil for fertilizer and machinery with North Korea, Cuba and Russia. He said Malaysia was talking to Morocco, Jordan, Syria and Iran about other barter deals.
“[Bartering] could be used for contracts with other countries that do not have the cash,” Mr, Chin told the local press. “We can set the conditions for them to supply us with the raw materials that we need.”
Thailand, the world’s largest exporter of rice, is discussing barter deals with Middle Eastern countries, including Iran. The Philippines, the world’s largest importer of rice, has secured rice needs for this year through a diplomatic agreement with Hanoi.
The countries’ struggles to obtain credit to import food are boosting the price of domestic crops. Ms. Sheeran said that prices of crops in some African countries were rising sharply even as international food commodities prices had fallen from last summer.
The move to barter shows that the global food crisis that started last year is far from over.