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The food crisis is not about a food shortage The ultimate cause of hunger is not a lack of Western agricultural technology but the failure to allow people to participate in a food system of their own choosing, says Jim Goodman. THE food crisis of 2008 never really ended, it was ignored and forgotten. The rich and powerful are well fed; they had no food crisis, no shortage, so in the West, it was little more than a short-lived soundbite, tragic but forgettable. To the poor in the developing world, whose ability to afford food is no better now than in 2008, the hunger continues. Hunger can have many contributing factors: natural disaster, discrimination, war, poor infrastructure. So why, regardless of the situation, is high-tech agriculture always assumed to be the only solution? This premise is put forward and supported by those who would benefit financially if their 'solution' were implemented. Corporations peddle their high-technology genetically engineered seed and chemical packages, their genetically altered animals, always with the 'promise' of feeding the world. Politicians and philanthropists, who may mean well, jump on the high-technology bandwagon. Could the promise of financial support or investment return fuel their apparent compassion? A New Green Revolution? The
One
of the key players in Monsanto
giving free seed to poor smallholder farmers sounds great, or are they
just setting the hook? Remember, next year those farmers will have to
buy their seed. Interesting to note that the Gates Foundation purchased
$23.1 million worth of Monsanto stock in the second quarter of 2010.
Do they also see the food crisis in Lack of justice, not food Food shortages are seldom about a lack of food - there is plenty of food in the world - the shortages occur because of the inability to get food where it is needed and the inability of the hungry to afford it. These two problems are principally caused by, as Frances Moore Lappe put it, a lack of justice. There are also ethical considerations; a higher value should be placed on people than on corporate profit - this must be at the forefront, not an afterthought. In
2008, there were shortages of food, in some places, for some people.
There was never a shortage of food in 2008 on a global basis, nor is
there currently. True, some countries, in The
recent food riots in While
millions of people go hungry in Not
everyone living in a poor country goes hungry; those with money eat.
Not everyone living in a rich country is well fed; those without money
go hungry. We in the Why is there widespread hunger? Is food a right? Is profit-taking through speculation that drives food prices out of the reach of the poor a right? Is pushing high-technology agriculture on an entire continent that could feed itself a (corporate) right? In developing countries, those with hunger and poor food distribution, the small farmers, most of whom are women, have little say in agricultural policy. The framework of international trade and the rules imposed by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank on developing countries place emphasis on crops for export, not crops for feeding a hungry population. Feeding the world Despite what we hope are the best intentions of the Gates Foundation, a New Green Revolution based on genetically engineered crops, imported fertiliser and government-imposed agricultural policy will not feed the world. Women, not Monsanto, feed most of the world's population, and the greatest portion of the world's diet still relies on crops and farming systems developed and cultivated by the indigenous for centuries, systems that still work, systems that offer real promise. A report of 400 experts from around the world, the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD), is ignored by the proponents of a New Green Revolution, precisely because it shows that the best hope for ending hunger lies with local, traditional, farmer-controlled agricultural production, not high-tech industrial agriculture. To feed the world, fair methods of land distribution must be considered. A fair and just food system depends on smallholder farmers having access to land. The function of a just farming system is to insure that everyone gets to eat, industrial agriculture functions to insure those corporations controlling the system make a profit. The ultimate cause of hunger is not a lack of Western agricultural technology. Rather, hunger results when people are not allowed to participate in a food system of their choosing. Civil wars, structural adjustment policies, inadequate distribution systems, international commodity speculation and corporate control of food from seed to table - these are the causes of hunger, the stimulus for food crises. If
the Gates Foundation is serious about ending hunger in Jim
Goodman is a dairy farmer from Wonewoc, Wisconsin, *Third World Resurgence No. 240/241, August-September 2010, pp 49-50 |
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