There is a time for food, and a time for ethical appraisals.
This was the case even before Bertolt Brecht gave life to
that expression in Die Driegroschen Oper. The time for a reasoned,
coherent understanding for the growing food crisis is not
just overdue, but seemingly past. Robert Zoellick of the World
Bank, an organization often dedicated to flouting, rather
than achieving its claimed goal of poverty reduction, stated
the problem in Davos in January this year. ‘Hunger and
malnutrition are the forgotten Millennium Development Goal.’
Global food prices have gone through the roof, terrifying
the 3 billion or so people who live off less than $2 a day.
This should terrify everybody else. In November, the UN Food
and Agricultural Organization reported that food prices had
suffered a 18 percent inflation in China, 13 percent in Indonesia
and Pakistan, and 10 percent or more in Latin America, Russia
and India. The devil in the detail is even more distressing:
a doubling in the price of wheat, a twenty percent increase
in the price of rice, an increase by half in maize prices.
Finger pointing is not always instructive. In this case,
it may be. The US and various European countries are moving
food crops into the bio-fuel business, itself an environmentally
unsound business. This, in addition to encouraging developing
countries to not merely ‘liberalize’ their agricultural
sectors, but specialize in exporting specific cash crops (cotton,
cocoa), has done wonders to precipitate the shortages. Consumption
in developing economies, added to the vicissitudes of climate
change, water availability, and rising fertilizer costs, are
others.
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Political stability is being undermined. Food shortages are
proving endemic. Food riots are becoming common. Riots have
been sparked in Cameroon, Egypt, Burkina Faso, Uzbekistan
and Yemen. There have been riots over spiraling grain prices
in Mauritania and Senegal. In Mexico City, mass protests were
sparked by a price hike in tortillas. In Haiti, biscuits are
being made from a mud compound. The Somali capital Mogadishu
bore witness to the deaths of five people.
Governments, indifferent and incautious to the demands of
a hungry public, have already fallen victim to the food crisis.
Prime Minister Jacques Edouard Alexis was dismissed by a senate
vote in Haiti after skirmishes between UN forces and protesters.
The UN commander Major General Carlos Alberto Dos Santos Cruz
urged calm amidst the carnage. ‘It is important for
the people to have a peaceful life in Haiti,’ he claimed
in April 2008. The message then: be peaceful on an empty stomach.
The Bush administration, so often in arrears on the relief
front, has earmarked some 770 million dollars or so in funds
dealing with the problem. There is one glaring hitch: the
money would only start flowing in 2009. ‘There is definitely
a lag time when it comes to assistance,’ states the
senior manager of the Foreign Aid Reform Project at the Brookings
Institute, Noam Unger.
More troubling is the critique offered of the crisis by officials
within the administration. US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, at the Peace Corps conference held at the end of April,
targeted various culprits. The audience barely stirred at
some of the explanations: distribution, oil prices, and the
‘alternate fuels effort’. They duly woke up when
Rice moved on to targeting the export strategies of various
countries – India and China foremost amongst them. ‘We
obviously have to look at places where production seems to
be declining and declining to the point that people are actually
putting export caps on the amount of food.’
The problem, for Rice, is rising food consumption. Improved
diets within China and India are bothering free market fundamentalists
who insist that export caps stifle trade. According to this
rationale, Indians are far better off buying the rice from
the global market than eating their own in times of crisis.
How silly of them to ensure a domestic supply first before
shipping off the rest for the global market. Rice is crying
foul at such protectionist deviancy, will ‘have a look
at it’ and take the matter to the World Trade Organization.
Members of the American public are not so sure. A narrative
of catastrophe is gradually building – stockpile or
perish. The Wall Street Journal (April 25) was one of the
first to issue the clarion call: ‘Start Hoarding Food
Americans!’ The paper had various suggestions. Stock
up on some products – dried pasta, rice, cereals, canned
products. Buy them all in bulk to save. Sit the children down
give them a good talking to – no, not about the birds
and the bees, but about ‘how our generation and the
two behind it, screwed their world into a death spiral through
greed and predatory capitalism.’
Solutions suggested by such economists as Jeffrey Sachs,
somewhat patchy yet desperately needed, are forthcoming: allow
easier access for sub-Saharan African farmers to fertilizers;
reduce the amount of crops going into bio-fuel development;
shore-up climate change policies.
Sachs, in his work Common Wealth, also advocates the abolition
of states in the face of a crowded planet. But it was state
regimes besotted by neoliberal economics that brought us here.
They can take us back and remedy the damage. Abolishing them
would simply absolve their regimes.
In the meantime, the US and some countries in the West may
have to brace themselves for a starving army guided by the
morality of the stomach. The food riots are coming.