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Chinese thirst for formula spurs rationing

By Amie Tsang, Louise Lucas and Neil Hume

Supermarkets as far afield _________the UK and Australia have been forced to ration infant formula due to (01) rampant Chinese demand for foreign-made baby milk, Mainland Chinese buyers have been snapping up cans of formula (02) across the globe following safety scandals in the domestic market, starting with the melamine-spiked milk of 2008 that killed six babies and left 300,000 sick.

Voracious demand for overseas-manufactured formula - Chinese babies are expected to slurp their way through 24-</span>32).</span></em></p><p><em>Production of formula is _________under pressure, as a severe drought in New Zealand - the biggest provider in the global dairy trade - forces up the cost of raw milk powder. The New Zealand price, a proxy for Asia-Pacific, was 30 per cent higher month-on- month in March. The frenzy for formula has forced governments to step in. Hong Kong, _________ shelves of formula are regularly cleared by mainland visitors, introduced curbs at customs in February.</em></p><p> <strong>(Adapted from Financial Times June 22\ ^{nd}$ 2013, from the Internet edition)

Glossary:

bn = billion

Rmb = Ren Min Bi (The official currency of China)

The approximate translation for the expression “snap up”, according to its usage in the passage “Mainland Chinese buyers have been snapping up cans of formula ...” (02), is