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Historically, food costs have followed the movement of oil prices.

This relationship encompasses fertilizers, transportation, energy, and agricultural inputs, all highly sensitive to the price of a barrel of oil.

The graph clearly illustrates this dynamic: shocks to Brent crude oil prices end up being reflected, with some lag, in the global food index.

In other words, more expensive oil doesn't just put pressure on energy… it puts pressure on the entire supply chain.