Starving the Poor to Stuff the Rich: The Global Agri-Business Model
04/05/2013 by Don Quijones
A daily ration of bread is now beyond the reach of roughly a billion people on planet Earth. What’s more, hunger is spreading like a pandemic, making incursions from its traditional strongholds in the global south to towns and cities across depression-hit Southern Europe. In Greece, reports are growing of young children having to scrounge for food from classmates, while in Spain city dwellers have become all but enured to the daily spectacle of people of all ages, genders and walks of life rummaging in rubbish bins for food.
Some people point to the growing incidence of famines as evidence of the unsustainability of current population growth — and to an extent they probably have a point. After all, there’s only so many people that the world’s rapidly declining resources can sustain. However, as Esther Vivas of the Pompeu Fabra University’s Centre of Studies on Social Movements points out in the video below, the crude reality is that many of us continue to live in a world of food abundance.
The problem of world hunger, she says, is the result of the acute inefficiencies of a global agribusiness model geared purely at garnering ever larger profits for the handful of businesses that now control the global food chain. Tragically, all too often the human cost of their greed is measured in the lives of those who don’t have enough money to pay the rapidly escalating prices of basic foodstuffs.
The 11-minute interview offers fascinating insights on a global industry that prioritizes at every possible turn profits and power over human welfare. Unfortunately, the video is in Spanish and without English subtitles, so for those of you whose linguistic talents don’t quite extend to the Spanish tongue, here’s a brief summary of the highlights:
Supermarket Dominance
Like virtually everywhere in the global north, Spain’s food chain is dominated by a handful of supermarket chains which, through their oligopolistic structures, are able to more or less dictate what people eat, how much they pay for their food and how much farmers receive for their produce. Needless to say, it is a model that is wiping out small local farmers throughout Europe and the U.S., as well as leaving a terrible toll on the environment due to the vast distances much of our food has to travel before reaching our plates.
Food Speculation
The same people who kindly brought us the suprime crisis and the resultant Great Recession are now speculating vast quantities of money on the price of basic foods on the international commodity exchanges. As a result, the prices on these exchanges are no longer determined by real-world conditions of supply-and-demand but rather by the financial interests and whims of a small but extremely powerful group of big banks and hedge funds, many of whom have been gorging at the trough of taxpayer largesse for the last five years (for more information on the financialisation revolution, read this).
The Fatal Cost of Price Shocks
In countries like Ethiopia and Somalia, the price of essential foodstuffs more than doubled in the space of just a couple of months in the summer of 2011. In these countries many families spend as much as 80 percent of their disposable income on food, so when the price doubles, they simply go without. It is estimated that one person dies of hunger every 8-12 seconds.
The Famine Myth
Whenever famines place, the media tends to put the blame on meteroological problems, droughts or war, often ignoring the elephant in the room: the wholly ineffcient and inhumane global argibusiness. Indeed, what we’re rarely told is that many countries in the global south were largely self-suficient in food production until the late 1970s.
In the 80s and 90s, however, the rise of the global “free trade” movement meant that many local farmers suddenly faced fierce competition from some of the world’s biggest food producers — companies which received vast subsidies from the U.S. government or E.U. and were thus able to produce huge food surpulses, which they them dumped on some of the world’s poorest countries at below-cost price.
The result: peasant farmers and smallholders were priced out of the market and countries which had for centuries been self-sufficient in food production became wholly dependent on food imports — hence their stark vulnerability to food price shocks.
The Privatization of Virtually Everything
The breakneck pace of privatisation of land and seeds in the last 30 years has massively enriched the political and economic elites of both the Northern and Southern hemispheres, at the expense of the general population. As much as 70 percent of the world’s seeds now belong to a handful of huge multinational conglomerates, granting them virtual control over the global food chain. Seeds, which for millenia have been a common good to be shared out and improved among small communities of farmers, are now almost the sole preserve of companies like Monsanto and Syngenta, which brings us to:
The GM Revolution
As global hunger rises, ever-greater pressure is being brought to bear on countries to embrace GM technologies — despite clear evidence of the risks they pose. [According to an international study from 2008, the industrialisation of agriculture, of which GM is a part, has led to the heavy use of artificial fertilisers and other chemicals. These have in turn harmed the soil structure and polluted water ways. What’s more, the leeching of the soil of essential minerals means food is less healthy than 60 years ago].
Perhaps most importantly, legitimate concerns remain about the impact on GM foods on human health. For this reason, countries across Europe including Germany, France, Switzerland and Greece continue to prohibit sales of GM food. But not so in Spain, where GM crops are routinely tested, grown and sold to unsuspecting consumers. [Indeed, Spain has more large-scale plantations of genetically modified seeds than any other country in the European Union (EU), accounting for 42 percent of all field trials of genetically modified crops in the EU, according to figures from the European Commission Joint Research Centre].
We Are What We Eat
Clearly, if we regularly consume GM products or food with high levels of pesticides, flavourings and chemical fertilizers, the long-term toll on our health will be heavy indeed. But despite what we are often told by Agribusiness representatives, there are alternatives out there. We can choose to eat healthier options such as by buying local organic food, and in turn help to support local farmers. We can even develop our own urban allotments, as more and more city dwellers are choosing to do. The most important thing is not to descend into apathy and resignation, for that is precisely what the world’s major food corporations want.
For those of you who have made it this far and have a reasonable level of Spanish comprehension, here’s the interview in full:
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- La Doctrina de la Austeridad depende de un ‘Error de Calculo’: Otro Fraude del 1%
- U.N. Says Somalia Famine Killed Nearly 260,000 (ipsnews.net)
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- First Genetically Modified Meat and Salmon To Be Approved Despite Public Outrage (aworldchaos.wordpress.com)
Reblogged this on Mi LuMaCa
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Reblogged this on Food sovereignty reflections and commented:
Corporate concentration, price-taking farmers, financial speculation on global commodity markets, the diversion of grain crops to biofuels – when the global food system is democratic, then we will have a chance of ending the scourge of hunger and malnutrition.
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Reblogged this on Dogma and Geopolitics.
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