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WORLD FOOD CRISIS BEGINS TO BITE
by Jack Ferguson
THE
world is currently being gripped by a devastating food crisis.
Prices
of many basic foods, such as crops like wheat or rice, or
the animals that are fed on them, have rocketed in price
in recent months.
The
reasons for this are complex, but the consequences have
been brutal for millions of poor people across the world.
As the cost of feeding their families shot up, they have been
protesting and rioting from
All
across the world poor countries have been encouraged and
forced to open their economies to ‘free trade’, removing
all restrictions on what can be imported and exported. The consequence
is that poor farmers have been thrown off their land, and
growing urban populations became dependent on the products
of big business plantation agriculture.
Poor
countries have been turned into giant plantations for cash
crops. Instead of farming to meet their own needs they farm
products that will make a profit (most of which will never
be seen by the growing country) like tobacco or coffee.
Their population is dependent on cheap imported foods.
The
problem is that this global food system is now starting
to unravel, as the rich world increasingly looks to use
agricultural products like corn to make biofuels, and feed cars instead of people.
More
and more food being diverted to biofuels has driven up the cost of eating.
The
other huge problem is the dramatic increase in oil prices. Many
countries that produce oil are facing major political problems
disrupting supply, the most obvious being the idiotic
Overall
world food prices have risen 40 per cent in the last nine
months, although in many regions the price of some key foods
has risen far more steeply. The UN World Food Programme
has warned that stocks are at their lowest for 30 years,
meaning people dependent on international aid to survive
will soon be facing starvation.
Socialist
President of
Chavez
said in a televised speech, citing UN statistics about deaths
caused by hunger and malnourishment.
“The
problem is not the production of food ... it is the economic,
social and political model of the world. The capitalist
model is in crisis.”
Of
course, the huge agribusiness corporations, and their backers
in western governments and international financial institutions,
haven’t learned anything from the tragedy unfolding before
them.
The
agribusiness and chemical mega corporations like Monsanto
and Novartis are trying to exploit
events to push their products on to countries around the
world.
The
biotechnology giants have long tried to portray genetically
modified (GM) foods as the solution to world hunger, allowing
ever increasing yields of crops.
However,
for years now a successful international movement has fought
back against GM, arguing that corporations who hold patents on
crops will use them to extract the maximum profit they can
from poor farmers.
This
has been seen all over the world, as agribusiness forces
farmers to buy their seeds from them instead of collecting
them at the end of the season, and to become more and more
dependent on artificial pesticides and fertilisers. The
cost of meeting the payments has driven thousands of Indian farmers
to commit suicide in the last decade in despair.
Recently
a UN-backed body of thousands of experts around
the world issued a major report about what needs to be done
to be able to feed the Earth’s growing population. The International
Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology
for Development (IAASTD) made some proposals that were far
from radical, but would make an improvement to the situation.
They
called for land reforms to put more land in the hands of
poor farmers, and programmes to be put
in place to make sure their incomes were guaranteed.
The
biotechnology industry walked out of the process, and refused
to endorse the final report. They threw a gigantic huff
when they realised that the world’s agricultural experts
weren’t going to support their crazy claims for GM foods
and biotechnology.
Far
from solving the world’s food crisis, biotechnology would
in fact deepen it. It would encourage huge plantation style agriculture
that is totally dependent on oil. And it would do nothing
to address the real reason underlying the recent rise in
food prices-the madness of the way food is produced and
distributed under capitalism.
But
despite what the food corporations might say, they know
all this. Their promotion of biotechnology and GM food is
nothing to do with feeding the poor and everything to do
with increasing their profits and control over poor farmers.
Agribusiness
is the second most profitable industry in the
Socialists,
environmentalists, farmers and consumers must get together
to build an international movement that challenges the capitalist control
of our food chain.
All
across the poor world people are already getting political
about the food crisis and demanding action. The challenge
for activists in the rich countries is to build solidarity
with them and take on our companies and governments. Now
more than ever the world needs a completely different model
of farming, based on protecting poor peasants around the world
who have historically been the ones that always fed humanity.
We must move towards a more organic form of agro-ecology,
farming in a way that protects other species and enriches
our soil for future generations. If we leave farming to
the capitalists they will rob all life from the soil and
sacrifice the poor on the altar of ever greater profits
for the few.