Heres why the price of groceries keeps rising

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Americans continue to pay more at the grocery store as surging food inflation shows no signs of slowing down. 

Grocery prices rose 13 percent over the last year and 0.7 percent in September alone, outpacing the annual 8.2 percent inflation rate for all consumer products, according to the most recent Labor Department data. 

The price of fruits and vegetables increased by 10.4 percent annually, while milk rose 15.2 percent and eggs soared 30.5 percent. 

Prices could keep rising well into next year, experts say, as its unclear when fundamental issues like Russias invasion of Ukraine, extreme droughts and supply chain snarls will let up.

What we’re hearing and what we expect is its going to be a pretty rocky fall, said Andy Harig, vice president of tax, trade, sustainability and policy at the Food Industry Association. I think we’re probably into the end of the second quarter next year before we get to where its a little bit more stable footing.

Experts are concerned about the threat of a recession coupled with high food prices, which rose last month even as the cost of gasoline, cars and other products fell. 

While the Federal Reserves interest rate hikes are slowing demand for certain discretionary goods, people will always need to buy food, limiting the impact of monetary policy on prices.

When food prices increase, its an even higher percentage of lower income households budgets, said Jordan Teague, policy director at anti-hunger organization Bread for the World. 

If people need to pay rent or they have a medical bill, they have to make really hard decisions about what theyre not going to pay for, and oftentimes that means buying cheaper but less healthy foods or not buying as much food. War in Ukraine stifles supply

Russias invasion hit the global food system with a double whammy by reducing food exports from Ukraine a top supplier of wheat and cooking oils and prompting Russia to slow its fertilizer exports. 

Fertilizer prices surged to record levels this year after Russia, the worlds top fertilizer exporter, halted its shipments in response to international economic sanctions. Belarus, another top fertilizer producer and an ally of Moscow, has also limited its exports, as has China. 

Thats made growing crops more expensive than ever. Higher fuel prices brought on by Russias invasion make it costlier for farmers and processors to operate equipment and for manufacturers to produce food packaging.

People knew going into the summer that we should plant extra because there’s going to be this huge global demand. But planting is so expensive now that in a lot of cases they didn’t have the money, Harig said. 

Global wheat prices spiked following Moscows invasion, which blocked Ukraine from accessing the Black Sea, its main trade channel. Thats translated to massive price increases for flour, cereal and bread in the U.S. and abroad. 

U.S. producers have upped their exports to African countries that rely on Ukraine for food and are facing widespread famine. Russia and Ukraine struck a deal to allow for exports to proceed, but Moscow has threatened to undo it and recently annexed several regions of Ukraine that account for roughly one-fifth of the countrys wheat supply.  Supply chain disruptions remain a problem

Farmers and food processors have reported difficulties transporting grain, livestock and other products amid a shortfall of truck drivers, refrigerated trucks and railroad workers. 

Freight railroads, which transport roughly one-quarter of U.S. grain, have been plagued by reliability issues that prevent food from getting to its destination on time, further shrinking supply. The industry is scrambling to hire more conductors and engineers after laying off large numbers of workers in recent years. 

Since May, railroads on average failed to fulfill 14 percent of freight deliveries and arrived late 30 percent of the time, according to the Surface Transportation Board. Railroads were forced to briefly cancel agricultural shipments last month amid a potential rail strike, which was averted but could reemerge as a threat to the supply chain in mid-November. 

Barges, which transport 13 percent U.S. grain, are the latest mode of transportation to face issues. Many barges are struggling to travel through the Mississippi River, a key agricultural channel, due to dangerously low water levels.

The situation is especially problematic during the height of harvest season, when farmers are looking to move grain to storage facilities, according to American Farm Bureau Federation economist Daniel Munch.

Without relief, many producers will scramble to find places to store their goods or face exorbitant wait times and costs to acquire transportation, he wrote in a post on Thursday.

Progressive lawmakers and advocacy groups have criticized large multinational corporations for failing to invest in resilient supply chains and instead using their excess funds to reward shareholders with stock buybacks. Extreme weather and disease ravages farms

This years harsh droughts have devastated farms across the U.S., shrinking yields and ultimately driving up prices at the grocery store. 

Climate change has hit farmers in the American West particularly hard. Thats driven up the price of tree nuts, fruits and vegetables that are almost entirely grown in states plagued by drought.  Faster, wetter hurricanes are on the way, say Department of Energy scientists White House marks rollout of over-the-counter hearing aids at retailers nationwide

Top trade partners are also feeling the effects of heat waves. The price of coffee beans spiked this year after severe droughts hammered coffee crops in South America.  

At the same time, huge outbreaks of bird flu this spring contributed to a 17.2 percent hike in the price of poultry over the last 12 months as other meats saw smaller increases.

Turkey breast prices reached an all-time high in September 112 percent pricier than the same period last year after widespread outbreaks curtailed production, according to the Farm Bureau. 

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