Almond prices are soaring. As the following chart shows, some
varieties are selling for double the price of five years ago, others for
three times more. What is driving the upward price trend? Supply and
demand is the easy answer. Behind the supply and demand curves lies a
more complex story of nuts, cows, and bees.
Cows are out, nuts are in
One
of the factors behind the increase in almond prices is a shift in
tastes toward foods that consumers perceive as healthier. Milk from cows
is out. U.S. consumption of cow’s milk, which consumers associate with
artery-clogging cholesterol, has fallen more than third since the 1970s.
It is a generational thing. According to an analysis of government data
by FoodNavigator-USA.com,
each population cohort drinks less milk than the one before. In the
late 1970s, Americans of all ages drank, on average, about one glass of
milk a day. Thirty years later that was down to about two-thirds of a
glass. And it is not just adults who are giving up on cow’s milk. Over
the same period, children aged 2 to 12 years cut their daily milk intake
from 1.7 glasses to 1.2. >>>Read more
Follow this link to view or download a classroom-ready slideshow that applies supply and demand theory to the market for almonds.
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