
Die Krise in der Straße von Hormus wird sich auf die Kunststoff- und Lebensmittelversorgungsketten auswirken, Peking und Moskau helfen, den Amerikanern schaden

Die Krise in der Straße von Hormus wird sich auf die Kunststoff- und Lebensmittelversorgungsketten auswirken, Peking und Moskau helfen, den Amerikanern schaden
Ein Kommentar
***The Atlantic Council is a U.S.-based transatlantic think tank focused on Western alliance and security issues.***
Excerpts:
The United States will feel the economic impact of rising input costs on multiple fronts. When the cost of producing crops increases, farmers and food processors will pass those expenses through the supply chain, directly increasing the final price consumers pay for goods. Farmers may also be less incentivized to grow nitrogen-intensive crops, such as corn. This could also have cost implications for livestock feed, and thus meat and dairy products for consumers.
As ammonia, fertilizer, and diesel input prices rise, farmers will plant less and crop yields will fall, sending consumer food prices higher. If Beijing, in partnership with Moscow and Minsk, selectively restricts agricultural-related exports, then US and global inflation will run higher.
Every day the Strait is closed brings higher prices and new risks for the United States and its allies. As allied industrial capacity tightens, especially in petrochemicals and fertilizers, China and Russia will increasingly be able to secure new geopolitical leverage across global supply chains. Every day the war continues gives them more cards to play.