ROME, ITALY / RankWire.AI / – Trade policy choices can determine how quickly global food markets recover from shocks, the Food and Agriculture Organization said in a flagship report released Thursday. The State of Agricultural Commodity Markets 2026 examines disruptions caused by extreme weather, conflicts, pandemics, financial stress, energy prices and technological events. It finds that open, connected trade networks can move food toward areas facing shortages. It also warns that restrictive measures can spread instability across borders.

Global food and agricultural trade has expanded fivefold since 2000, reaching about $2 trillion, according to FAO. More countries now depend on international markets for supplies, income and access to a wider range of foods. That integration increases the importance of resilient trade links when production or transport breaks down. The report says markets usually adjust within months, although food price increases can last much longer. The expansion has tied national food security more closely to stable cross-border supply chains.
FAO found that export restrictions by major producers can raise global prices and deepen food insecurity in importing countries. Trade policy changes explained about 45 percent of the world rice price increase during the 2007-08 food crisis. They also accounted for about 30 percent of the rise in wheat prices. During the COVID-19 pandemic, fewer and shorter restrictions affected 8 percent of globally traded calories, compared with 16 percent in 2007-08. Coordinated restraint reduced the share of food exposed to sudden barriers.
Diversified trade links strengthen market defenses
Countries that buy food from a broader group of suppliers generally withstand disruptions better, the report found. Those that rely on a small number of exporters face greater exposure when one source suffers a shock. Connections to major trade hubs can soften the effects because those exporters maintain links with many markets. FAO based this analysis on monthly trade data covering all countries from 2007 through 2024. Diversification gives importers more options when weather, conflict or logistics interrupt established supply routes.
After a shock, export volumes across bilateral trade links fall sharply, but the effect usually fades within six months. Prices can behave differently. Sudden increases may persist and do not always reverse through matching declines. Wheat markets tend to return to normal faster than rice markets. Rice disruptions last longer and cause larger price movements because a smaller share of global output enters international trade. Local markets also absorb world price changes at different speeds, depending on the commodity and disruption.
Targeted reserves support food security
Food reserves form another part of resilience planning, but their design matters, FAO said. Large government buffer stocks intended to stabilize domestic prices have proved costly and fiscally difficult to sustain. The report supports smaller emergency reserves linked to social protection programs for vulnerable households. Such systems can address immediate food insecurity without creating the same level of market distortion. FAO also stresses that reserves work best alongside functioning trade channels, targeted public support and policies that preserve access to international supplies.
The report calls for stronger international cooperation, predictable policy frameworks and greater trust in the multilateral trading system. FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu said integrated trade networks benefit all countries, while fragmentation and uncertainty impose the heaviest costs on the poorest. Policy coordination can speed market adjustment and limit food price spikes when several countries face disruption at once. The findings place trade policy at the center of food security planning as global markets confront more frequent and intense shocks. FAO links those measures directly to stronger food market resilience.
