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Food Crisis and Global Agricultural Reform

Entry: Bill Guyton

I was forwarded the article below from Martin Wolf, reporter for the Financial Times. He raises some interesting points on the causes of high food prices and strategies to address this problem, including humanitarian; trade and other policy interventions; and longer-term productivity and production. As he indicates, increased spending on research will be essential in the long term to tackle issues of food insecurity.

In the article, Wolf mentions the 37 countries in “substantial need” of food assistance, according the FAO. Several of these are cocoa producing countries such as Ghana, Cote I’Ivoire, Ecuador, Vietnam. In these countries, cash crops such as cocoa play an important role of providing income to millions of small scale family farmers. New technologies for both food and cash crops can enhance farm-level productivity, enabling farmers to earn more, support their families’ educational and health needs, and invest in the future.


Food crisis is a chance to reform global agriculture

The Financial Times

By Martin Wolf

Of the two crises disturbing the world economy – financial disarray and soaring food prices – the latter is the more disturbing. In many developing countries, the poorest quartile of consumers spends close to three-quarters of its income on food. Inevitably, high prices threaten unrest at best and mass starvation at worst.

The recent price spikes apply to almost all significant food and feedstuffs (see charts). Yet these jumps are themselves part of a wider range of commodity price rises. Powerful forces are linking prices of energy, industrial raw materials and foodstuffs. Those forces include rapid economic growth in the emerging world, strains on world energy supplies, the weakness of the US dollar and global inflationary pressures.

Yet the food element of this story carries its own significance. As HSBC points out in a recent analysis*, with rice and wheat prices spiking, riots on the streets of the Philippines, Egypt and Haiti and moves by India, Vietnam, Cambodia and China to restrict rice exports, food is suddenly an even hotter issue than normal.

So why have prices of food risen so strongly? Will these higher prices last? What action should be taken in response?

On the demand side, strong rises in incomes per head in China, India and other emerging countries have raised demand for food, notably meat and the related animal feeds. These shifts in land use reduce the supply of cereals available for human consumption.

Furthermore, rising production of subsidized biofuels, further stimulated by soaring oil prices, boosts demand for maize, rapeseed oil and the other grains and edible oils that are an alternative to food crops. The latest World Economic Outlook from the International Monetary Fund comments that "although biofuels still account for only 1½ per cent of the global liquid fuels supply, they accounted for almost half of the increase in consumption of major food crops in 2006-07, mostly because of corn-based ethanol produced in the US".

Meanwhile, aggregate production of maize, rice and soyabeans stagnated in 2006 and 2007. This was partly the result of drought. Also important, however, have been higher prices of oil, since modern farming is so energy-intensive. With weak growth of supply and strong increases in demand, cereal stocks have fallen to their lowest levels since the early 1980s. Declining stocks undermine the widely shared belief that speculation has driven the rising prices, since stocks would be rising, not falling, if prices were above market-clearing levels.

Vastly more worrying than speculation is the weak medium-term growth of supply. The rapid increases in yields of the 1970s and 1980s, at the time of the "green revolution", have slowed. Given the stresses on water supplies, longer-term supply prospects would look poor even if diversion of land for production of biofuels were not adding to the pressure.

Are prices going to remain high? Two opposing forces are at work. The first is the market, which will tend to bring prices back down as supplies expand and demand shrinks. But the latter is also what we want to avoid, at least in the case of the poor, since reducing their consumption is not so much a solution as a failure. The second force is the current intense pressure on the world's food system. This is true of both demand and costs of supply. Prices are likely to remain relatively elevated, by historical standards, unless (or until) energy prices tumble.

This, then, brings us to the big question: what is to be done? The answers fall into three broad categories: humanitarian; trade and other policy interventions; and longer-term productivity and production.

The important point on the first is that higher food prices have powerful distributional effects: they hurt the poorest the most. This is true both among countries and within them. The Food and Agricultural Organisation in Rome recently listed 37 countries in substantial need of food assistance. Moreover, according to the World Bank, soaring food prices threaten to make at least 100m more people hungry.

Increases in aid to the vulnerable, either as food or as cash, are vital. Equally important, however, is ensuring that the additional supplies reach those in greatest difficulty. The options depend on the sophistication of a country's bureaucratic machinery. But they include work paid directly with food (which is a good way of screening out the better-off), a rationed supply of cheap food for the poor or cash vouchers. Those most in need will be the landless, both rural and urban, and marginal subsistence farmers.

Now turn to the policy interventions. Protection, subsidies and other such follies distort agriculture more than any other sector. Alas, the opportunity to eliminate protection against imports offered by exceptionally high world prices is not being taken. A host of countries are imposing export taxes instead, thereby fragmenting the world market still more, reducing incentives for increased output and penalising poor net-importing countries. Meanwhile, rich countries are encouraging, or even forcing, their farmers to grow fuel instead of food.

The present crisis is a golden opportunity to eliminate this plethora of damaging interventions. The political focus of the Doha round on lowering high levels of protection is largely irrelevant. The focus should, instead, be on shifting the farm sector towards the market, while cushioning the impact of high prices on the poor.

Finally, far greater resources need to be devoted to expanding long-run supply. Increased spending on research will be essential, especially into farming in dry-land conditions. The move towards genetically modified food in developing countries is as inevitable as that of the high-income countries towards nuclear power. At least as important will be more efficient use of water, via pricing and additional investment. People will oppose some of these policies. But mass starvation is not a tolerable option.

The food and fuel crisis of 2008 is a cry for our attention. Nobody knows how long these shocks will last. But they demand rapid policy changes across the globe. We must choose between fragmenting world markets still further and integrating them, between helping the poor and letting even more starve and between investing in improving supply and allowing food deficiencies to grow. The right choices are evident. The time to make them is now.

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Comments (1)

The World's Growing Food-Price Crisis – A Crime Against Humanity.

We are seeing a new demonic face of hunger in which people are being priced out of the food market. Sharp food price hikes are hurting the poor and sparking violent protest all over the world.

This is happening against a global campaign against the production of Biofuels with the United Nations having declared it a Crime Against Humanity.

In November last year the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation warned that poor developing countries will be forced to cut food consumption and risk an increase in malnutrition. Sub¬-Saharan countries are most at risk and high food prices means it is increasingly difficult to meet the United Nations goals of hunger reduction.

The re-balancing of food prices in relation to the price of energy is likely to cause severe social distress. People across the world are becoming frustrated at the escalating food prices and are more and more are choosing to vent their anger at their governments.

Climate change is also playing a role and appears to be increasingly destructive as massive droughts and storms, such as a cyclone last year, destroyed R4 320 million worth of rice in Bangladesh. Harvests have been seriously disrupted by freak weather, including prolonged droughts in Australia and the Southern African region with floods in West Africa. The past winter's deep frost in China and record-breaking warmth in Northern Europe have all contributed to the food crisis.

The rising cost of oil is the major contributor to the food crisis, affecting the cost of production, transport and fertilisers. This is driving the switch to biofuel production as an alternative to hydrocarbons and the race among western countries to produce Biofuels is responsible, in significant part, for the escalating food costs. The logic is simple: When countries put corn aside for energy, the amount available for food is in greater demand, and prices rise. If demand is already high, the effect is amplified.

Generous government subsidies for ethanol in the U.S. have lured thousands of farmers away from growing crops for food. George Bush recently signed an energy bill that will require the U.S. to double annual ethanol production by 2022. Bush also used his 2007 State of the Union address to propose a mandatory target for the replacement of about a fifth of oil-based transport fuels with 35 billion gallons of biofuels by 2017. Nearly a third of the corn output in the U.S this year will be used to make an estimated 9.3 billion gallons of ethanol.

There is enough food in the world for everyone but it is the pursuit of profit that stops people from having enough to eat. The working class and poor across the world are being forced to pay for this capitalist crisis.

The price increases are a disaster for workers, the unemployed and poverty stricken communities around the world. Capitalist governments and the imperialist powers who are complete servants of multinationals will not raise an eyebrow if not pushed by mass protest. These giant corporations are prospering and profiteering at an alarming rate in an environment of neo-liberal policies.
There is no long-term solution under capitalism, because the overriding interest of food manufacturers and distributors is profit.

Corruption, governments’ collusion with profit-hungry traders, food manufactures and multinationals coupled with drought & bad weather, high oil prices stocking transport costs, spiking bio-fuel demand and low reserves are the contributors to this malaise.

There is no guarantee that governments will positively respond, but public attention can often illuminate otherwise ignored problems. In Pakistan and Afghanistan, as well as in Latin America and West Africa, millions are growing dissatisfied with their governments.

The demand must be made for the government to swiftly implement policy measures that include (1) price controls on most staple food items, (2) the establishment a State-owned Commodity Marketing Board that must be the sole buyer of particular commodities and/or operate a guaranteed price/purchase scheme for others, (3) the sale and transfer agricultural inputs & technologies to farmers, at subsidized prices, that lower input cost but contributes to higher yields and increased productivity and (4) a state entity for the production of some basic commodities.

These policies and programmes must allow for (1) market interventions to alter the food prices directly, (2) support to improve competitiveness of the agricultural sector and above all safety net interventions in support of poor households. The cry for the Basic Income Grant must grow louder and louder.

Governments around the world must come under pressure from protest movements to fix food prices and even nationalise some food production. The organs of state, including parastatals, must implement and prioritise programmes to alleviate the plight of the poor and improve the quality of life of the people.

It remains that people driven global campaigns must be embarked upon by organised formations of the people to force governments to act swift, ensure food security for all and attain the Millennium Development Goals.

Let us all join hands and fight against this crime against humanity.
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