Durante la pandemia sólo los ricos se han hecho mucho más ricos. Jeff Bezos podrá comprarse un nuevo yate de 500 millones. Y mientras tanto, la inflación ya está aquí, pero como Christine Lagarde no pasa por el super pues no se entera:
What has grown most in the pandemic? Billionaire bank balances – and food bank queues
The rich are now nearly 40% richer than before the coronavirus crisis. Meanwhile, food prices rise, and more and more people go hungry
Cost of living … A customer leaving a grocery story in Brooklyn, New York, in 2020. Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images
Tue 11 May 2021 14.55 BSTLast modified on Wed 12 May 2021 11.45 BST
Is food made out of gold now? Because it’s starting to seem that way. Every time I go to my (extremely not fancy) local New York supermarket I am shocked at how expensive groceries have become. Prices seem to jump every month – in fact,
food prices are up 3.5% compared with last spring, according to the US Department of Agriculture. While that might not sound extreme, it adds up. And it’s going to keep going. “People will have to get used to paying more for food,” a food distribution expert told
Bloomberg recently. “It’s only going to get worse.”
There are numerous reasons why food prices are rising around the world, ranging from the climate crisis and a spike in commodity prices to supply chain issues caused by the pandemic. But, please, let’s not pretend a drastic increase in food prices and world hunger is a fiendishly complex problem no one can solve. To quote Mahatma Gandhi: “There’s enough on this planet for everyone’s needs but not everyone’s greed.” In New York, there are at least
three empty houses for each homeless person. In the US, food waste is estimated to be between
30 and 40% of the food supply; while last year, nearly one in four households experienced
food insecurity. I live in the richest country in the world and yet every week I see people in my neighbourhood queueing up at food banks. Every week, those lines get longer. Which is weird because, last time I checked, the US was a capitalist country. And from everything I’ve heard, socialism brings breadlines and capitalism brings efficiency and prosperity! Apparently, someone forgot to tell hungry Americans this.
Of course, the wonderful thing about capitalism is that one man’s disaster is another man’s economic opportunity. In the past, rising food prices have been blamed on banks speculating in
agricultural commodities. Which is very profitable. In 2012, Goldman Sachs
made about $400m (£251m) from food speculation; around the same time, tens of millions of people were
pushed into poverty because of food prices. I don’t know how much banks are making from the current food crisis, but I do know that, thanks to the coronavirus crisis, the 1% are richer than ever. Billionaires
collectively gained $1.1tn in 2020; they are now nearly 40% richer than they were before the pandemic. While large swathes of the world don’t know how they are going to put food on the table, billionaires don’t seem to know what to do with all their cash. Jeff Bezos is reported to be buying a $500m superyacht; the boat is so big that it needs its own “
support yacht”.