IN recent years, global food security has suffered from overlapping crises caused by conflicts, geopolitical tensions, climate change and the Covid-19 pandemic, resulting in severe food supply disruptions. These disruptions have been accentuated by several “food chokepoints”, such as in the Red Sea where Yemen-based Houthi fighters have attacked merchant ships and caused uncertainty in food shipments via the Suez Canal.

The shipping traffic through the Panama Canal has decreased due to drought which also hit river transport systems, such as the Mississippi River and the Rhine River.

As the global food system is increasingly dependent on the movement of food from a few major “breadbasket” exporting regions to food-deficit areas around the world – often through these “food chokepoints” – the reliance on specific shipping routes intensifies the pressure on global food security. It also impacts agricultural product competitiveness, delivery schedules as well as food availability and prices.

Longer shipping durations also put perishable foods at risk while shipping disruptions such as changes to shipping schedules, strain cargo handling and road transport sectors cause major delays.

Implications for Asia

For food-exporting and importing countries, challenges loom. Exporting countries may face profit margin pressures which reduce the prices for producers while importing countries grapple with potential increases in transport costs, which lead to higher food prices, greater price volatility and altered consumption patterns.

Southeast Asia, East Asia and South Asia face heightened vulnerability due to their reliance on European and Black Sea markets for key agricultural products and fertilisers.

Import disruptions pose inflation risks, contributing to a cost-of-living crisis. In countries grappling with crises such as extreme weather (Pakistan), conflict (Bangladesh and Myanmar), economic turmoil (Sri Lanka) and political uncertainties (Thailand), food price inflation exacerbates poverty and stalls socioeconomic growth.

The most impacted – the lower-income and middle-income households – may also face heightened malnutrition risks, threatening to reverse decades of development progress in Asia.

Consequences of trade disruptions

The US announced plans in late December 2023 for a task force to counter the Houthi attacks in the Red Sea but immediate relief for trade disruptions and food price inflation is unlikely.

Continued supply chain disruptions, coupled with escalating geopolitical tensions, raise concerns about food and fertiliser supplies being weaponised as exemplified in the Ukraine-Russia war.

Amid recurrent crises, urgent reforms to food systems are essential. Governments and policymakers must prioritise preparedness and resilience-building at national and regional levels to address food security issues and mitigate future impacts.

For the many net food importing countries in Asia, aside from increasing national stockpiles, governments and policymakers should diversify sources to mitigate supply chain disruptions. A good example is Singapore, which, while importing over 90% of its food, has reduced vulnerability to food price and supply fluctuations through contact with more than 180 countries and regions.

This strategy has been largely successful, resulting in Singapore enjoying the world’s second most affordable food, behind Australia. The average Singaporean household spends less than 10% of monthly expenses on food, in contrast with the Philippines’ 38%.

Additionally, the Philippines, which has a large food deficit, ranks low in affordability, importing nearly 80% of its agricultural imports. Food inflation in the Philippines reached 8% in 2023.

Facilitating food access

Nationally, governments must implement early action plans and bolster social safety nets to ease the burden of the cost-of-living crisis.

Initiatives such as food relief, cash support and food voucher programmes for lower-income households can help alleviate the burden. Subsidies and tax measures, which can provide temporary relief, may also be considered.

With average households spending over a third of their income on food in countries such as the Philippines, and lower-income households in countries like Indonesia spending up to 64% on food monthly, addressing food price inflation is crucial to safeguard average and lower-income households from under-nutrition.

Increasing intra-regional food trade

To address the interconnected issues of food availability, access and affordability, Asian governments reliant on food imports can sign agreements with agricultural exporting countries in the region such as grain and oilseed powerhouses Australia and New Zealand to avoid risks posed by chokepoints.

Greater focus on intra-regional trading is also encouraged, such as in Southeast Asia, which has large exporters of key agricultural products, including rice (Vietnam and Thailand) and palm oil (Malaysia and Indonesia).

Increased intra-regional trade can reduce regional food import dependency while also increasing regional food accessibility, market stability and economic development.

This can be supported by initiatives to encourage investments in agricultural research and development in the region to boost the production of other staples (such as wheat) and reduce reliance on imports.

Looking ahead

For Asian governments and policymakers, the ongoing supply chain disruptions in the Middle East are a reminder of the importance of resilient national and regional food supplies and agrifood systems.

Amid continuing food price inflation and malnutrition, countries must address these interlinked concerns at national and regional levels in the short and long term.

By implementing policy measures such as food import diversification and strengthening social safety nets, the region has a better chance of bracing itself for food security challenges ahead.

Genevieve Donnellon-May is a research associate at the Asia Society Policy Institute in Melbourne, Australia. Paul Teng is an adjunct senior fellow at the Centre for Non-Traditional Security Studies, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

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