As widespread drought annihilates crops and sends prices
increasingly higher, supply chain managers at healthcare facilities are no
doubt eyeing their budgets.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is calling the country’s
drought “the most serious situation we’ve had in probably 25 years,” said
Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack during a press briefing on Wednesday.
Seventy-eight percent of the corn crop and 77 percent of the
soybean crop are in drought areas, Vilsack said. More than 1,200 counties in
more than 25 states have been designated disaster areas.
The drought has caused a spike in crop prices, particularly
for corn and soybeans, with a 38 percent increase for corn since June 1 and a
24 percent increase for soybeans, Vilsack said.
The pricing increases the country is seeing right now, said
Mike Zarembski, a senior analyst at OptionsExpress by Charles Schwab, are the
result of a miscalculation. Farmers planted near-record acreage in corn and
soybeans so everyone was expecting a record yield this year.
“The prices were reflecting ample supplies going in this
year so I think a lot of people got caught short, expecting to be able to
obtain supplies much cheaper as the harvest went along,” said Zarembski.
“Unfortunately, this drought hit starting six weeks, eight weeks ago here in
the Midwest and it has completely devastated – especially the corn crop is
really going to be hard hit this year.”
Anticipating tighter supplies means “(I)t’s going to be
higher prices across the board for really any kind of food stocks that involve
the grains or the energies as well,” he said.
But Amanda Hamilton thinks it is worry that’s driving the
market right now with no solid reason for it. “We have been watching what’s
happening and to be quite honest nothing has happened yet,” said Hamilton, the
director of sourcing operations at group purchasing organization, Novation.
“Specifically with corn, I think there’s a rise only because
of the fear factor but not because anything substantially happened,” she said.
“We have about another 30 days or so. I mean the outlook isn’t good if it
doesn’t rain.”
“One of my suppliers told us the other day, ‘Just pray for
rain,’” she said. “If rain comes we’ll be sitting in a good spot.”
But given the National Weather Service’s extended outlook of
continued drought, Hamilton says it is wise not to panic but to begin thinking
about how to manage supply budgets. “It’s hard to tell right now what the
percentage of increase is going to be as far as price goes,” she said since
what the yield will be is still unknown. “I wouldn’t feel comfortable giving
them any kind of firm number, however I will say find room. Find room for next
year of comfort to be able to take from other areas to move over to this area.”
Source: healthcarefinancenews
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