“When thinking about the future, businesses need to consider possible scenarios and these shouldn’t always be straight line forecasts with a plus or minus contingency. I bet nobody had COVID-19 on their radar as a disruptor and we all had to deal with it very quickly. Thinking about these black swan events is something strategy departments need to have on their agenda,”​ Stefan Vogel, global sector strategist, grains & oilseeds, at Rabobank, told this publication. 

Vogel made these comments in the context of a newly published RaboResearch report: ‘The F&A Fallout of a Fragmented World: A Thought Experiment’. ​An add-on to Rabobank’s 2020 report The World in 2030, this new ‘thought experiment’ explores the hypothetical implications for global food and agribusiness that would result from a shift in power from the US to China. 

“China has emerged over the last 12 months from being a minor importer of corn to the world’s largest importer, and over the last decade it has become the largest importer of soybeans. Therefore it made sense to look at the relationship between the US and China and what it could mean if we see the world fragmenting and China striving to be the global hegemon,” ​explained Vogel, lead author of this latest report. 

A not so pretty picture

The report sets out three possible scenarios for international alliances and examines the impacts each in terms of food security, trade flow disruptions, price pressure and supply and demand economics.

“Depending on the scenario, the impacts could be significant, partly threatening food security in deficit regions (China alliance) while hurting farmer margins in surplus areas (US alliance),” ​wrote the report’s authors.