Google AI
The Times Australia
Business and Money

The cocoa price has doubled in mere months, but it shouldn’t add much to the price of chocolate: here’s why

  • Written by: Darian McBain, Visiting Professor in Practice, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment;, London School of Economics and Political Science

Since the start of this year, the price for cocoa traded on the futures exchange has doubled, climbing from US$4,275 a tonne to US$9,481 after earlier hitting an all-time high of US$10,274.

So it would be natural to expect the price of chocolate to soar, and to expect cocoa growers to get more.

But, as surprising as it seems, my calculations suggest neither is likely, although we can certainly expect the price of chocolate to rise.

The price of cocoa is soaring because intense heat and rains[1] have hit harvests in West Africa. Yields are expected to fall short for the third year in a row.

As this has happened, climate change and desertification have shrunk the amount of land suitable for growing cocoa, at the same time as demand for cocoa has continued to grow.

An increase of US$5,000 per tonne means an increase of 50 US cents per 100 grams.

A typical chocolate snack weighing 45 grams includes about 15% cocoa, so it contains seven grams. This means an increase in the cocoa price of US$5,000 per tonne is only capable of increasing the cost of a typical chocolate snack by about four US cents, which is six Australian cents.

But already this year the price of finished chocolate bars has increased by more.

In Europe, Mondelēz (which makes Cadbury) has increased prices by 12–15%[2]. In the United States, Mars has increased prices by 15%.

And those increases come on top of hefty increases in 2023. In a year in which cocoa prices should have pushed up the cost of the cocoa in a typical 45 gram snack by less than one US cent (less than two Australian cents), Mondelēz increased some prices by 15%[3] and Nestlé by 9.5%[4].

And Mars and Nestlé shrank some of their bars.

This needn’t mean profiteering. There’s a lot that goes into chocolate in addition to cocoa. Among the other inputs are sugar, milk, dried fruits and nuts, factory labour, wrapping and distribution. But it does mean the recent explosion in cocoa prices doesn’t explain much about what’s happened to the price of chocolate.

Higher prices no bonanza for growers

In some countries, 90% of cocoa growers don’t earn a living income[5]. Many of the 800,000 cocoa farmers in Ghana survive on just US$2 a day.

The average cocoa farm in West Africa is just three to four hectares[6], producing less than one tonne per year. These are conditions that can exacerbate child labour, forced labour and deforestation, which itself contributes to climate change.

On the face of it, the increased price will help, allowing farmers to educate their children rather than put them to work.

But it’s not that straightforward. One reason is that although some farmers are getting more per tonne, many are producing fewer tonnes as a result of the hit to harvests.

Farmers don’t get futures prices

Another reason is that in Cöte d’Ivoire and Ghana (which between them produce 60% of the world’s cocoa) governments fix the farmgate price. What happens on the futures market is of little immediate relevance.

And the higher futures prices might not last. If traders become less worried about prices going up, the current high futures prices could fall before they get fed into the prices paid to growers.

As well, farmers get very little of the price – on one estimate only 6–7%[7] of the price. The producers of cocoa products get 40–45%, and the rest is taken up by transport and related costs.

More importantly, researchers estimate that to reach a living income, farmers would need to be getting three to four times[8] what they have been getting, rather than merely twice as much.

Read more: Each Easter we spend about $62 a head on chocolates, but the cost of buying unsustainable products can be far greater[9]

And when the price of cocoa goes up, other costs in those poor communities tend to go up as well, not only essentials such as rice but things needed for growing cocoa such as fertiliser.

I look forward to the day when a chocolate company says its prices are going up because it has decided to give the farmers who grow its cocoa a living income.

Some are making welcome steps. Mars has a target of doubling[10] the income of its cocoa farmers in Cote d'Ivoire and Indonesia by 2030.

But we are still a long way from paying growers properly. Although we are certainly paying more for chocolate, right now very little of it is going to the ultimate producers of its most important raw material.

Carolyn Kitto from Be Slavery Free assisted with the preparation of this piece. If you would like to know more about companies’ progress towards paying a living income go to www.chocolatescorecard.com[11].

References

  1. ^ intense heat and rains (unctad.org)
  2. ^ 12–15% (www.reuters.com)
  3. ^ 15% (www.euronews.com)
  4. ^ 9.5% (www.reuters.com)
  5. ^ don’t earn a living income (www.oxfam.org)
  6. ^ three to four hectares (www.cocoainitiative.org)
  7. ^ 6–7% (lebasic.com)
  8. ^ three to four times (www.forbes.com)
  9. ^ Each Easter we spend about $62 a head on chocolates, but the cost of buying unsustainable products can be far greater (theconversation.com)
  10. ^ doubling (www.forbes.com)
  11. ^ www.chocolatescorecard.com (www.chocolatescorecard.com)

Authors: Darian McBain, Visiting Professor in Practice, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment;, London School of Economics and Political Science

Read more https://theconversation.com/the-cocoa-price-has-doubled-in-mere-months-but-it-shouldnt-add-much-to-the-price-of-chocolate-heres-why-226914

Business Times

How Will Businesses Large, Small and Startups Adapt to the New Re…

Australian businesses are entering what many executives, investors and entrepreneurs increasingly d...

Australian manufacturers see sharp drop in revenue, profitability…

Key figures: Average revenue down 42% from Q3, down 44% on same quarter last year Average Profit margins plunge to 32%, l...

The Global Nappy Industry: The Big Players

The global nappy industry is one of the largest, most resilient and most quietly profitable consumer sectors in the world. ...

The Times Features

How Can Beginners Stay Motivated After Joining a Gym?

Starting a fitness journey is an exciting step, but staying consistent can be challenging for many...

MARIAM SEDDIQ UNVEILS “ECHOES” AT AUSTRALIAN FASHION WE…

At Australian Fashion Week 2026, MARIAM SEDDIQ will unveil “ECHOES”: a collection that exists in the...

The MOST SPECTACULAR NIGHT ON THE HARBOUR is COMING …

Sydney is set to witness a defining cultural moment this winter as The Jackson Sydney presents an ex...

What Has the Federal Budget Done to Relieve Mortgage St…

For millions of Australians struggling with rising home loan repayments, the federal budget prompt...

Households Fear Built-In Obsolescence in Their Househol…

Australian households are increasingly asking a frustrating and expensive question: Why do modern...

Federal Budget 2026: Why Millions of Australians Fear W…

For weeks Australians heard the familiar promises surrounding the federal budget. Relief. Suppor...

The Mood Of A Nation: Australians Feel Something Is Sli…

There is a mood in Australia right now that is difficult to quantify but impossible to ignore. It...

Alpine resorts unite on a new digital platform

Alpine Resorts Victoria has successfully gone live on a new Digital Visitor Servicing Platform  (DVS...

The 2026 Budget: What the Federal Opposition Has to Say

The Albanese Government’s 2026 federal budget has triggered an immediate and fierce response from ...