霍尔木兹海峡封锁引发的全球能源危机,不过是与伊朗开战所带来的经济代价的开端。
笔者研究制度对企业和供应链的影响机制,预计后续粮食价格将出现上涨,且即便敌对行动结束,高粮价态势仍将持续一段时间。
霍尔木兹海峡承担着全球约20%的原油贸易、相近比例的液化天然气运输,同时还承载着全球约三分之一的国际化肥贸易,而化肥是全球农作物高产的关键。
现代农业高度依赖养分供给的精准时机。当化肥运抵时间延迟,或因价格过高而无法足量采购时,农民只能减少施肥、缩减种植面积,或改种对肥料需求较低的作物。每种选择都会降低农业综合产能,进而导致基本口粮、牲畜饲料以及各类食品的关键原料的供应减少。
最终,随着玉米价格上涨,夏季烧烤食材的口味可能会有所不同,或者价格更高。玉米棒可能不再平价,谷饲牛肉亦是如此。此外,许多商店售卖的调味品、软饮料和其他食品都含有高果糖玉米糖浆,其价格也将同步上涨。
三大主粮作物,三大必需养分
玉米、小麦和水稻这三种主粮作物,为全球人口提供了超半数的膳食热量。
为了最大限度地提高产量,这些作物需要三种主要养分:氮、磷和钾。氮元素促进作物生长;磷元素参与植物细胞内的能量运输,对根系早期发育、种子与果实形成至关重要;钾元素帮助作物锁住水分,提升蛋白质含量。
霍尔木兹海峡遭封锁,导致这三种养分供应减少,成本攀升。
天然气占氮肥生产成本的70%至90%,受战争影响,其产量下降20%,价格涨幅高达70%。为保障本土供应,俄罗斯已暂停硝酸铵(氮肥的另一核心原料)出口。
无独有偶,全球最大的磷肥生产国中国,已叫停磷肥出口,导致全球供应量减少25%。
钾肥作为作物所需的钾素养分来源,近年来本就处于供应短缺状态,部分原因在于全球主要钾肥生产国白俄罗斯与俄罗斯遭受经济制裁。
受此影响,全球化肥价格全面上涨。在美国,2026年2月下旬战争爆发后,部分化肥价格在短短一个月内就上涨逾40%。
农民首当其冲
谷物作物在生长初期就会吸收整个生长周期内绝大部分的氮元素。在生长周期后期补施氮肥,效果会大打折扣。
氮肥施用量减少10%至15%,或是施肥时间推迟2-4周,玉米减产幅度可达10%-25%。
玉米、小麦减产,不仅会减少人类口粮供应,还会减少牲畜饲料供给。化肥成本上涨叠加谷物供应减少,将推高养殖成本,进而导致肉类及动物制品价格上涨。
当饲料成本突破养殖户的承受极限,养殖户可能被迫宰杀或出售能繁母牛和能繁母猪——这两类种畜禽直接决定了未来的肉类供应能力。2022年,美国遭遇持续干旱,叠加养殖成本高企,养殖户被迫宰杀了全国13.3%的肉牛,这一比例创下历史新高。受此影响,美国肉牛存栏量降至1962年以来的最低水平,这将导致未来数年牛肉供应受限。
最终,这些成本都将转嫁给消费者。2012年,美国中西部地区遭遇历史性干旱,玉米产量锐减13%,引发饲料价格飙升,美国禽肉价格上涨20%。
投入更多资金也无法解决这一问题
2026年3月中旬,美国化肥供应量仅为正常水平的75%。此时正值美国玉米带农民整地备种的关键节点,包括首轮施肥。后续施肥通常集中在4月中旬至5月初,以及5月下旬至6月中旬。
出于对玉米无法实现最高产量的担忧,农民可能会决定减少玉米种植面积,或改种对肥料需求较低的大豆。无论做出哪种选择,都会导致玉米供应减少。
政府提供的贷款担保和援助计划或许能帮助农民应对成本上涨,但如果施肥关键期化肥供应不足,再多资金也难以弥补施肥延误造成的损失。
冲击美国本土
美国消费者虽未像其他国家那样因战争面临燃油、食品短缺或停电困境,但他们也将面临生活成本压力。美国汽油和航空燃油价格已开始上涨。粮食供应受到的冲击虽存在滞后性,但其影响终将显现。
即便美国本土作物迎来丰收,消费者也难以在全球经济波动中独善其身。2026年全球玉米减产,叠加中国和印度等人口大国的牲畜饲料需求持续增长,将推高全球玉米价格,届时影响将不分国界,波及每一个人。
2026年3月,美国农业部基于伊朗战争爆发前的数据预测,全美食品价格将平均上涨3.1%。
消费者面临的问题是:玉米价格上涨,将有多大比例转嫁给消费者,以及转嫁的速度有多快。
美国农业部的研究表明,食品价格变动的速度和幅度因食品类别及加工程度而异。库存水平、易腐性及市场竞争等其他因素也会产生影响。当农产品收购价出现波动时,批发价通常会在一个月内调整,但零售价的调整可能需要更长时间——有时长达2-4个月。
玉米价格上涨后,玉米薄饼等加工度较低的玉米制品的价格通常会在数月内完成调整。谷物、禽肉价格的调整需要稍长时间。而牛肉等畜禽制品的价格变动,耗时会更久——因为从采购饲料玉米到将肉类销售给消费者,中间涉及更多环节。
与燃油和包装成本相关的其他间接成本的上涨往往更为滞后。生产商通常会在短期内自行消化涨价压力,但部分成本上涨已开始显现。例如,运输公司正在对货运加收燃油附加费。
食品价格上涨对低收入家庭的冲击大于高收入家庭,因为低收入人群在食品和住房上的支出占比更高。对于这些家庭来说,即使是鸡肉这类相对平价的蛋白质来源,也可能变得难以定期采购。
全球粮食危机
化肥的价格和供应情况将对全球产生深远影响。全球已有超3亿人面临粮食短缺困境。联合国世界粮食计划署预测,如果中东冲突持续到2026年年中,到2026年底,将再有4500万人面临同样的困境。
2026年,印度、巴西的作物产量预计将低于常年水平。东非农户即便在此次危机爆发前,就已无力承担化肥成本,如今大概率只能被迫减少用肥量维持生产。
这些问题对大多数美国人来说似乎遥不可及,但食品价格具有全球联动性,美国民众很快也将面临这场战争带来的额外成本。(财富中文网)
阿亚·S·查卡尔(Aya S. Chacar),佛罗里达国际大学国际商务学教授
本文根据知识共享许可协议,转载自The Conversation。
译者:中慧言-王芳
The global energy crisis caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is only the beginning of the economic cost of the war with Iran.
I study how institutions affect businesses and supply chains, and I expect food prices to rise next, with high prices lasting even after whatever point hostilities end.
Along with about 20% of the world’s crude oil trade and a similar share of the world’s liquefied natural gas shipments, shipping traffic through the strait also carries roughly a third of internationally traded fertilizer, which is key to bountiful crops around the world.
Modern agriculture depends on precise timing of delivering nutrients to plants. When fertilizer arrives late or becomes too expensive to buy in sufficient quantities, farmers are left to either reduce the amount they use, plant fewer crops or switch to crops that need less fertilizer. Each option reduces overall productivity, cutting supplies of basic foods, feed for livestock and key ingredients used in a wide range of food products.
Ultimately, with corn prices rising, summer barbecues may taste a bit different or cost more. Corn on the cob may not be cheap, nor will corn-fed beef. In addition, many store-bought condiments, soft drinks and other food products are made with high-fructose corn syrup and will also cost more.
3 main crops, 3 nutrients needed
Three staple crops – corn, wheat and rice – supply more than half of the world’s dietary calories.
To maximize production, those crops need three main nutrients: nitrogen, phosphate and potassium. Nitrogen helps plants grow. Phosphorus helps transport energy within plant cells and is critical for early root growth and the formation of seeds and fruit. Potassium helps plants conserve water and boosts protein content.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has reduced the supply and increased the cost of all three.
Natural gas, which determines 70% to 90% of the cost of producing nitrogen fertilizer, has seen a 20% drop in production due to the war and price increases up to 70%. To preserve its own supplies, Russia has suspended exports of ammonium nitrate, another nitrogen source for fertilizer.
In a similar effort, China, the world’s largest phosphate producer, has blocked phosphate exports, removing 25% of the global supply.
Potash, the potassium-rich component of fertilizers, has also been in short supply in recent years, in part because of economic sanctions on Belarus and Russia, which are major potash producers.
As a consequence, fertilizer prices have risen globally. In the U.S., some fertilizers rose more than 40% in just one month after the war’s start in late February 2026.
Affecting farmers first
Cereal plants absorb the vast majority of their nitrogen needs during their early growth. Applying fertilizer later in the growth cycle is less effective.
Reducing nitrogen application by 10% to 15%, or delaying application by two to four weeks, can reduce corn yields by 10% to 25%.
Producing less corn and wheat reduces not only food available for humans but also food for livestock. Increased fertilizer costs and reduced grain supplies increase the price of raising livestock, making meat and animal products more expensive.
When feed costs become unsustainable, farmers may be forced to kill or sell off the breeding cows and sows that represent the future of the food supply. In the U.S., a combination of persistent drought and high costs in 2022 forced producers to kill 13.3% of the national beef cow herd, the highest proportion ever. As a result, the U.S. beef cattle inventory shrank to its lowest level since 1962, a problem that restricts beef supplies for years.
Ultimately, the costs are passed to consumers. In 2012, when a historic Midwest drought slashed corn yields by 13%, it triggered a surge in feed prices, and U.S. poultry prices rose 20%.
More money can’t fix this problem
In mid-March 2026, the U.S. fertilizer supply was around 75% of normal levels. That’s right at the beginning of the time when Corn Belt farmers typically prepare their soil for planting, including the first applications of fertilizer. Subsequent fertilizer applications typically come from mid-April to early May and between late May and mid-June.
Farmers who fear not being able to optimize their corn yields may decide to plant less corn or switch crops and plant soybeans, which need less fertilizer. Either would reduce the corn supply.
Government loan guarantees and aid packages may help farmers cover higher costs, but they cannot address timing if enough fertilizer simply isn’t available when it is needed.
Hitting home
American consumers aren’t facing the gas and food shortages or power outages other countries are seeing from the war, but they will be hit in the pocketbook. U.S. prices for gas and jet fuel are already climbing. The effects on the food supply take longer to appear, but they are coming.
Even when crops are bountiful in the U.S., consumers are not immune to global economic forces. A smaller 2026 crop, with rising demand for livestock feed in some of the most populous countries, including China and India, will put pressure on global corn prices, affecting everyone regardless of their nationality.
In March 2026, the U.S. Department of Agriculture used data from before the Iran war to project a 3.1% average increase for all food prices.
The question for consumers is how much of the rise in corn prices will be passed to the consumer, and how fast.
USDA research shows that the speed and extent of changes in food prices vary widely by food category and the level of processing involved in making the food. Other factors also play a role, such as inventory levels, perishability and market competition. When farm prices change, wholesale prices usually adjust within the first month, but retail prices often take longer – sometimes two to four months.
Corn tortillas and other relatively lightly processed corn foods are more likely to show price responses within a few months after corn prices increase. Adjustments to cereals or poultry prices will take a little longer. Changes in the cost of livestock products such as beef will take longer, because there are more steps between the purchase of feed corn and the sale of the meat to consumers.
Other indirect costs, related to the cost of fuel and packaging, tend to hit later. Producers often absorb the price increases in the short term, but some increases are already in the works. For instance, transport companies are adding fuel surcharges on freight shipments.
Food price hikes hit low-income households harder than high-income households, because people with lower incomes spend larger shares of their money on food and housing. For these households, even relatively affordable proteins, such as chicken, may become harder to purchase regularly.
A global food emergency
The cost and availability of fertilizer will affect the whole world. More than 300 million people worldwide already do not have enough food. The U.N. World Food Program predicts an additional 45 million could join them by the end of 2026 if the conflict in the Middle East continues into the middle of the year.
Crop yields in India and Brazil in 2026 are expected to be lower than normal. East African farmers struggled to afford fertilizer even before the crisis and will likely have to make do with even less.
These problems may seem removed for most Americans, but food prices are global in nature, and people in the U.S. will soon face these additional costs of the war.
Aya S. Chacar, Professor of International Business, Florida International University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
