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This Little Piggy Shortage

Peter Parks / AFP-Getty Images
Fat of the Land: Beijing has tapped the country's official 'pork reserve'
 

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A new breed of criminal has emerged in China: "pigjackers." Soaring pork prices in the People's Republic have sent thieves roaring off with truckloads of hogs—and sometimes with smaller hauls, as was the case with the gang that was busted last year in Shenzhen trying to make off with 275 pounds of pork on a motorbike. A local newspaper valued the meat at upwards of $420, or roughly three times what a stolen motorbike might fetch in the city. Police easily caught the getaway bike; it couldn't handle all that weight.

The porcine crime wave is no joke to China's leaders. They see it as a sign of a much larger problem: even more than they worry about a repetition of Tiananmen Square, they dread the kind of mass unrest that could erupt out of a spike in pork prices. A full 65 percent of the country's total protein consumption is pork. The threat of a spontaneous uprising has been made worse by a freak blizzard that paralyzed central China last week—the region's worst in 50 years—stranding mobs of migrant workers on their way home for the Lunar New Year and disrupting shipments of the pig meat that is essential to holiday feasts. Food prices in general, and pork in particular, have been skyrocketing for months. Economic boom times are boosting demand even as the supply has plunged because of shrinking farmlands, rising grain prices and a "blue ear disease" epidemic that forced pig raisers to cull many thousands of hogs.

In an effort to head off serious trouble, Beijing has tapped the country's official "pork reserve." That's no joke, either; it's the actual term for the special stash of meat the Chinese government keeps frozen in case of a sudden crunch—not unlike America's Strategic Petroleum Reserve. But snowbound shipments of pork probably won't reach many Chinese families' tables in time for the holiday. And the country's underlying agricultural shortages will only get worse. The prospect is something for the whole world to worry about. Experts predict that China, long a major exporter of corn products, will soon become a net importer—possibly this year. When that happens, global grain prices could jump like this year's oil market.

© 2008

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: amer @ 02/05/2008 12:36:30 AM

    You all need to stop the hate, i know we all got problems, if the rest of the world doesnt care much about our problems is because we only help other countries when our interests are at stake, not only that, but we have even stopped caring about ourselves by letting politicians get wealthier at our expense. Perhaps we need to start going out and protest about our high oil prices instead of blaming the rest of the world for not caring about us. By the way, do not blame people from other countries for the job shortage here in the U.S, if anything , you need to blame the american companies that take jobs out of the country. As far as the pork problem goes, i do agree with encycliamarie. Also, Mr. believeintheone and johnwinterone are being unrealistic, this life is about survival. People who disobey jesus and the prophets stay alive. Not only that but you dont practice what you preach, " jesus" was not a hater, and you sure sound like a hater, are you sure you dont eat pork?

  • Posted By: GreatDane @ 02/05/2008 12:18:56 AM

    Much of the famine you mention (if it's the 1958-62 event) was directly caused by the stranglehold of destructive decisions flowing from the eminent Chairman Mae. The lower level cadres and mid-upper level bureaucrats and ministers did not dare tell him the truth about the devastation happening throughout the country. They kept lying about production quotas being met and exceeded, even as people were starving to death by the thousands and they knew it. If there is another famine in the offing, it would be a completely different type of event, as cell phone photos and internet access prevents the Chinese government from controlling the population by lies alone (the best illustration of the new limits of lies is the snow storms in the last couple of weeks...they've tried some low intensity lying to minimize the public's awareness of how bad it is, and it's blown up in their faces)

  • Posted By: encycliamariae @ 02/04/2008 4:47:03 PM

    Perhaps am increase in grain prices would ease the trade imbalance with China. They can sell us cheap goods and we can sell them grain and pork.

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