U.N. study says starve the poor -
The World Food Economy
19 Apr 2008 (CriticalOpinion.org) By Douglas Southgate: At a time when
food prices are beyond what many can afford, it is unconscionable to consider
policies that would make food scarcer and drive prices even higher. Yet that is
exactly what is advocated in a U.N.-backed report published this week.
The International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for
Development (IAASTD) published its confused and inconsistent recommendations for
more sustainable agriculture on April 15. Repeated throughout the report is the
message that, despite increases in food production, the benefits of modern
agriculture "have come at an increasingly intolerable price, paid by small-scale
farmers, workers, rural communities and the environment."
But the average inflation-adjusted price of agricultural products, indexed to
wages, fell by about 75 percent between 1950 and 1990, benefiting the poorest
the most.
Yet the IAASTD portrays the intensification of agriculture during and since the
Green Revolution in the mid-60s as a failure, claiming that "increases in
intensive, export-orientated agriculture had serious social and environmental
implications."
In fact, it is the very governments that the IAASTD wants to "empower" that are
responsible for such economic and environmental damage.
In spite of the current spike in food prices, mankind has done reasonably well
combating hunger in recent decades. As the population boomed, food production
consistently rose faster than demand, and the number of undernourished people
has fallen steadily since the late 1960s, from 35 percent of the total
population of the developing world to 17 percent.
Much of this progress came from the dramatic yield growth that the Green
Revolution brought to Asia after the mid-1960s. High-yield seeds, fertilizers,
other chemical inputs and irrigation systems meant that hundreds of millions of
people were saved from starvation.
And we grow more food on less land. This has allowed us to conserve forests and
wild habitats that would otherwise have been turned into fields. Economist Indur
Goklany calculates that, if technology and agricultural yields had been frozen
at their 1961 levels, we would need to farm more than twice the amount of land
we do today to obtain the same amount of food.
It is disingenuous to claim that agricultural technology and free trade have
only benefited corporations and ruling cliques. In many cases, small farmers
gained the most from the Asian Green Revolution, adopting better seed varieties
and techniques just as quickly as larger growers.
Poor farmers have benefited the most from agricultural technologies such as
machinery and chemicals, which have reduced back-breaking manual labor. Small
producers have become more competitive and food has become cheaper.
The IAASTD, however, argues that "business as usual" in agriculture cannot
continue. But what policies "to alleviate poverty and improve food security"
does it recommend instead? Agro-ecological approaches and organic farming. But
phasing out chemical fertilizers would massively decrease yields, driving up
prices still further. It would also increase the amount of land needed to
support the world's food demands, resulting in a huge loss of forest and other
pristine land.
The report further claims that "the poorest developing countries are net losers
under most trade liberalization scenarios," -- but fails to recognize that most
of the world's poor have never had access to free markets.
High import tariffs on agricultural goods -- averaging 33.6 percent between
Sub-Saharan countries -- mean that consumers are paying more than the market
price of food. Government meddling in food markets has also made agriculture
unprofitable for many producers, preventing them from selling on global markets.
In Africa, for example, government intervention in the form of heavy taxes,
quotas and marketing boards saw per capita food production fall 35 percent
between 1960 and 1985.
If the vast majority of the world's 850 million hungry people are to be
adequately nourished, their earnings will have to rise and food will have to
become cheaper. For many of these people, the best solution is to raise
agricultural productivity. For this to happen, governments need to remove the
economic barriers that currently make it more expensive for people to buy food
and for farmers to buy fertilizers, seeds and machinery. Free trade in food
would see producers responding efficiently to rising demand and would allow food
to reach those in need quickly.
Before issuing unrealistic recommendations on agriculture, the IAASTD report's
authors should have considered where people's priorities lie. While rich
Westerners may be able to spend money on feel-good, but pointless, gestures like
organic food and "fair trade," most people need cheaper food, and fast.
Bureaucracies don't create food -- people do: Governments can improve food
security mainly by getting out of the way of free-trading farmers.
Douglas Southgate is professor of Agricultural, Environmental and Development
Economics at Ohio State University and author of 'The
World Food Economy' (Blackwell Publishing, 2007).
Source:
http://www.criticalopinion.org/articles/146
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World Food Economy
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