Horrors!! From the Wall Street Journal, written by Leslie Josephs and Neena Rai
Consumers from California to Switzerland are developing a taste for
dark chocolate, taking a bite out of global cocoa supplies and driving
up candy prices in both high-end boutiques and mass-market drugstores.
The cost of one kilogram of chocolate in the U.S. is expected to hit a
record $12.25 this year, a 45% increase from 2007, according to
market-research firm Euromonitor International.
Prices are on the rise due to a
shortage of cocoa beans, which are roasted and ground to make chocolate.
Market experts estimate that supplies will fall short of demand this
year for the first time since 2010 and dry weather is expected to hurt
the next harvest in West Africa, where 70% of cocoa beans are produced.
Consumers from California to Switzerland are developing a taste for
dark chocolate, taking a bite out of global cocoa supplies and driving
up candy prices in both high-end boutiques and mass-market drugstores.
The cost of one kilogram of chocolate in the U.S. is expected to hit a
record $12.25 this year, a 45% increase from 2007, according to
market-research firm Euromonitor International.
Prices are on the rise due to a
shortage of cocoa beans, which are roasted and ground to make chocolate.
Market experts estimate that supplies will fall short of demand this
year for the first time since 2010 and dry weather is expected to hurt
the next harvest in West Africa, where 70% of cocoa beans are produced.
Read more here.
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