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High Food Prices Pressure Morocco Export-led Agricultural Model


Soaring inflation in Morocco is driving up living costs and stirring public anger, and as food prices increase the country’s export-led agricultural model is coming under fire.

Protesters on April 8 gathered outside Morocco’s parliament in the capital Rabat with some saying the rise in prices is a disgrace and they were an agricultural country, but vegetables are too expensive.

Official figures from February put year-on-year inflation in the North African country at just over 10 percent, a figure that also included a 20 percent jump in food prices.

The price of fresh produce in Morocco is almost as high as in some Western European supermarkets, but the minimum wage for Moroccans is just $300 (275 euros) a month.

Faced with growing criticism, Morocco’s Agriculture Minister Mohamed Sadiki attributed high food prices to ‘external and cyclical factors’ such as the rising cost of raw materials and a cold snap that delayed the picking of tomatoes.

Sadiki told a press conference in early April that despite the impact of climate factors such as drought, agriculture accounts for 13 percent of Morocco’s GDP and 14 percent of its exports.

Source: The East African