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World Food

Started by lisagurl, April 18, 2008, 02:25:43 PM

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lisagurl

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Hunger bashed in the front gate of Haiti's presidential palace. Hunger poured onto the streets, burning tires and taking on soldiers and the police. Hunger sent the country's prime minister packing.


Kirshnendu Halder/Reuters
HUNGER IN INDIA Villagers near the city of Hyderabad recently jostled for rice that was being sold by government officials. More Photos »
Haiti's hunger, that burn in the belly that so many here feel, has become fiercer than ever in recent days as global food prices spiral out of reach, spiking as much as 45 percent since the end of 2006 and turning Haitian staples like beans, corn and rice into closely guarded treasures.

Saint Louis Meriska's children ate two spoonfuls of rice apiece as their only meal recently and then went without any food the following day. His eyes downcast, his own stomach empty, the unemployed father said forlornly, "They look at me and say, 'Papa, I'm hungry,' and I have to look away. It's humiliating and it makes you angry."

That anger is palpable across the globe. The food crisis is not only being felt among the poor but is also eroding the gains of the working and middle classes, sowing volatile levels of discontent and putting new pressures on fragile governments.

In Cairo, the military is being put to work baking bread as rising food prices threaten to become the spark that ignites wider anger at a repressive government. In Burkina Faso and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa, food riots are breaking out as never before. In reasonably prosperous Malaysia, the ruling coalition was nearly ousted by voters who cited food and fuel price increases as their main concerns.

"It's the worst crisis of its kind in more than 30 years," said Jeffrey D. Sachs, the economist and special adviser to the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon. "It's a big deal and it's obviously threatening a lot of governments. There are a number of governments on the ropes, and I think there's more political fallout to come."

Indeed, as it roils developing nations, the spike in commodity prices — the biggest since the Nixon administration — has pitted the globe's poorer south against the relatively wealthy north, adding to demands for reform of rich nations' farm and environmental policies. But experts say there are few quick fixes to a crisis tied to so many factors, from strong demand for food from emerging economies like China's to rising oil prices to the diversion of food resources to make biofuels.

There are no scripts on how to handle the crisis, either. In Asia, governments are putting in place measures to limit hoarding of rice after some shoppers panicked at price increases and bought up everything they could.

Even in Thailand, which produces 10 million more tons of rice than it consumes and is the world's largest rice exporter, supermarkets have placed signs limiting the amount of rice shoppers are allowed to purchase.

But there is also plenty of nervousness and confusion about how best to proceed and just how bad the impact may ultimately be, particularly as already strapped governments struggle to keep up their food subsidies.

'Scandalous Storm'

"This is a perfect storm," President Elías Antonio Saca of El Salvador said Wednesday at the World Economic Forum on Latin America in Cancún, Mexico. "How long can we withstand the situation? We have to feed our people, and commodities are becoming scarce. This scandalous storm might become a hurricane that could upset not only our economies but also the stability of our countries."

In Asia, if Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi of Malaysia steps down, which is looking increasingly likely amid postelection turmoil within his party, he may be that region's first high- profile political casualty of fuel and food price inflation.

In Indonesia, fearing protests, the government recently revised its 2008 budget, increasing the amount it will spend on food subsidies by about $280 million.

"The biggest concern is food riots," said H.S. Dillon, a former adviser to Indonesia's Ministry of Agriculture. Referring to small but widespread protests touched off by a rise in soybean prices in January, he said, "It has happened in the past and can happen again."

Last month in Senegal, one of Africa's oldest and most stable democracies, police in riot gear beat and used tear gas against people protesting high food prices and later raided a television station that broadcast images of the event. Many Senegalese have expressed anger at President Abdoulaye Wade for spending lavishly on roads and five-star hotels for an Islamic summit meeting last month while many people are unable to afford rice or fish.

"Why are these riots happening?" asked Arif Husain, senior food security analyst at the World Food Program, which has issued urgent appeals for donations. "The human instinct is to survive, and people are going to do no matter what to survive. And if you're hungry you get angry quicker."

Leaders who ignore the rage do so at their own risk. President René Préval of Haiti appeared to taunt the populace as the chorus of complaints about la vie chère — the expensive life — grew. He said if Haitians could afford cellphones, which many do carry, they should be able to feed their families. "If there is a protest against the rising prices," he said, "come get me at the palace and I will demonstrate with you."



Bazuki Muhammad/Reuters
INFLATION IN MALAYSIA Cooking oil in a shop in Kuala Lumpur. Malaysians are angry at the rising cost of food and fuel. More Photos >
When they came, filled with rage and by the thousands, he huddled inside and his presidential guards, with United Nations peacekeeping troops, rebuffed them. Within days, opposition lawmakers had voted out Mr. Préval's prime minister, Jacques-Édouard Alexis, forcing him to reconstitute his government. Fragile in even the best of times, Haiti's population and politics are now both simmering.

"Why were we surprised?" asked Patrick Élie, a Haitian political activist who followed the food riots in Africa earlier in the year and feared they might come to Haiti. "When something is coming your way all the way from Burkina Faso you should see it coming. What we had was like a can of gasoline that the government left for someone to light a match to it."

Dwindling Menus

The rising prices are altering menus, and not for the better. In India, people are scrimping on milk for their children. Daily bowls of dal are getting thinner, as a bag of lentils is stretched across a few more meals.

Maninder Chand, an auto-rickshaw driver in New Delhi, said his family had given up eating meat altogether for the last several weeks.

Another rickshaw driver, Ravinder Kumar Gupta, said his wife had stopped seasoning their daily lentils, their chief source of protein, with the usual onion and spices because the price of cooking oil was now out of reach. These days, they eat bowls of watery, tasteless dal, seasoned only with salt.

Down Cairo's Hafziyah Street, peddlers selling food from behind wood carts bark out their prices. But few customers can afford their fish or chicken, which bake in the hot sun. Food prices have doubled in two months.

Ahmed Abul Gheit, 25, sat on a cheap, stained wooden chair by his own pile of rotting tomatoes. "We can't even find food," he said, looking over at his friend Sobhy Abdullah, 50. Then raising his hands toward the sky, as if in prayer, he said, "May God take the guy I have in mind."

Mr. Abdullah nodded, knowing full well that the "guy" was President Hosni Mubarak.

The government's ability to address the crisis is limited, however. It already spends more on subsidies, including gasoline and bread, than on education and health combined.

"If all the people rise, then the government will resolve this," said Raisa Fikry, 50, whose husband receives a pension equal to about $83 a month, as she shopped for vegetables. "But everyone has to rise together. People get scared. But we will all have to rise together."

It is the kind of talk that has prompted the government to treat its economic woes as a security threat, dispatching riot forces with a strict warning that anyone who takes to the streets will be dealt with harshly.

Niger does not need to be reminded that hungry citizens overthrow governments. The country's first postcolonial president, Hamani Diori, was toppled amid allegations of rampant corruption in 1974 as millions starved during a drought.

More recently, in 2005, it was mass protests in Niamey, the Nigerien capital, that made the government sit up and take notice of that year's food crisis, which was caused by a complex mix of poor rains, locust infestation and market manipulation by traders.

"As a result of that experience the government created a cabinet-level ministry to deal with the high cost of living," said Moustapha Kadi, an activist who helped organize marches in 2005. "So when prices went up this year the government acted quickly to remove tariffs on rice, which everyone eats. That quick action has kept people from taking to the streets."

The Poor Eat Mud

In Haiti, where three-quarters of the population earns less than $2 a day and one in five children is chronically malnourished, the one business booming amid all the gloom is the selling of patties made of mud, oil and sugar, typically consumed only by the most destitute.

"It's salty and it has butter and you don't know you're eating dirt," said Olwich Louis Jeune, 24, who has taken to eating them more often in recent months. "It makes your stomach quiet down."

But the grumbling in Haiti these days is no longer confined to the stomach. It is now spray-painted on walls of the capital and shouted by demonstrators.

In recent days, Mr. Préval has patched together a response, using international aid money and price reductions by importers to cut the price of a sack of rice by about 15 percent. He has also trimmed the salaries of some top officials. But those are considered temporary measures.

Real solutions will take years. Haiti, its agriculture industry in shambles, needs to better feed itself. Outside investment is the key, although that requires stability, not the sort of widespread looting and violence that the Haitian food riots have fostered.

Meanwhile, most of the poorest of the poor suffer silently, too weak for activism or too busy raising the next generation of hungry. In the sprawling slum of Haiti's Cité Soleil, Placide Simone, 29, offered one of her five offspring to a stranger. "Take one," she said, cradling a listless baby and motioning toward four rail-thin toddlers, none of whom had eaten that day. "You pick. Just feed them."
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Laura91

This post really made me think....here we are in the US and other wealthy countries whining about the price of gas and groceries and here are people who are starving to death while we groan about milk being 5 bucks a gallon. It made me realize just how lucky I and plenty of other people really are. Sometimes, it is difficult to see how good you really have it until reality slaps you in the face.
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gennee

#2
It can happen here, too. Many people in poorer communities can't pay higher prices. With the job market being shrunken due to consolidation many folks are struggling just to take care of basic needs. Yes, I'm thankful for this country but there are some who don't know why they should be thankful when they are losing much of what they worked so hard for.

Gennee 
Be who you are.
Make a difference by being a difference.   :)

Blog: www.difecta.blogspot.com
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Sister Seagull

It can happen here and it IS happening here.  Jobs going overseas, millions of people living at or below the poverty level who can't afford health care and basic necessities, homeless people in the millions... all the while, the middle class is disappearing as the housing market collapses triggering collapses in other markets as well and more jobs are lost.  Pay increases don't keep up with the skyrocketing inflation and are offset by a currency that is losing its value more every day.  The cost of feeding a family is getting to be more than a lot of people can easily afford.

Add to that all our other woes as a nation (and there are more every day) and I wonder why I get out of bed in the morning...
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Kaelin

It's still reasonable to whine about food and energy prices, as long as we are in tune with how much more pressing it is for people in developing nations.

The reality is that we are not producing enough food and energy for human consumption.  We can mitigate the energy shortage by producing more energy (wind, tidal, solar, geothermal -- and even nuclear is better than carbon combustables), as opposed to just settling for sucking the finite supply of oil/coal out of the ground.  We can improve on the food front by (1) removing the destructive ethanol subisidies (with ethanol requiring about as much energy to produce as you get from actually producing it), (2) subsidize food production as necessary (which we already do considerably), and (3) encourage food production in other countries (lower trade barriers, provide them the technology we use).

Food, energy, medicine, shelter, there are necessities for productive human life.  Shortages of these will stifle our own development.
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lady amarant

I came across these articles on Alternet, and thought readers of this thread might find them interesting:

The Hidden Battle to Control the World's Food Supply
http://www.alternet.org/environment/82632/

Face It, We All Aren't Going to Become Vegetarians
http://www.alternet.org/environment/82628/

Corporate Vultures Lurk Behind the World Food Crisis
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/83859/

~Simone.


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tekla

I clearly recall my dad telling me once "If you don't think you're in trouble now, you just don't know trouble."  And that's exactly what we are now looking at.  Consider this quote, as true as anything I've ever read.

"The human instinct is to survive, and people are going to do no matter what to survive. And if you're hungry you get angry quicker."

We don't dare use the word "ration" but even in the US there have been efforts at CostCo and SamsClub to 'limit' the amount of rice people can buy.  And rice is critical, as its the number one staple crop in the world.  If you have a rice shortage, you're going to get mass starvation. 

And its not just that 'we are not making enough food' its far closer to the fact that we are fast reaching the carrying capacity of the planet.  We can't plant fence row to fence row.  We don't have the water to make it possible to farm many areas now in production.  We are putting more and more food stocks into biofuels, and hence, less food on the table. 

If these riots had been localized to one nation or region, I might be able to shine it on, but its a global deal.  In Haiti, in Africa, in the former Soviet Union, in Asia.  That is not good at all.

People have been too occupied with minor threats like terrorists and Iraq and not paying attention to some of the very real stuff that Bush&Co have pulled off, including off-shoring lots of jobs and production ability.  I go to Mexico and see the factories lined up just across the border. 

Its like the gas deal.  Gas prices are NOT rising, as much as the dollar is falling.  Inflation is on the rise, making it harder for people to make ends meet who were already having big problems doing just that.

And its not just a fuel crisis (and none of those other options can supply the amount of power we currently use) its a fresh water crisis and an arable land shortfall also.  Combined, its a deadly mix.  And its not just there.  I see people eating out of trash cans everyday here, and I live in a pretty high rent area.  So far, people have enough to be tossing the extra away (or putting it on top, so that people can eat it without digging) but comes a time when that ain't happening anymore it could get rough. 
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
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Alyssa M.

The world produces plenty of food to go around.

The trouble is we squander a whole bunch of it to feed cattle (only getting 10% of the calories back in beef; trophic levels and all); we squander another bunch of it to make high-fructose corn syrup and other industrial poisons; and we flat out throw away a bunch more. And it's always been like this. We've pretty much always had more than enough food to eat on a global scale, and as a result we've always grown our population to the very limit of that amount of food. But because of the inequity and iniquity of society, there have always people left behind, and thus a drive to produce even more.

There are several solutions: war, famine, environmental catastrophe, and disease, for example. These will all alleviate the problem of hunger. Oh, yeah, there's one other thing: education for girls and women so that they have some say in their lives and reproductive choices.
All changes, even the most longed for, have their melancholy; for what we leave behind us is a part of ourselves; we must die to one life before we can enter another.

   - Anatole France
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BeverlyAnn

"The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race. The vices of mankind are active and able ministers of depopulation. They are the precursors in the great army of destruction, and often finish the dreadful work themselves. But should they fail in this war of extermination, sickly seasons, epidemics, pestilence, and plague advance in terrific array, and sweep off their thousands and tens of thousands. Should success be still incomplete, gigantic inevitable famine stalks in the rear, and with one mighty blow levels the population with the food of the world."

Reverend Malthus will always have the last laugh.

Beverly
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RebeccaFog

maybe if we didn't waste land on harvesting stupid crops like sugar, and if we didn't waste whatever the hell the ingredients of twinkies and ding-dongs are on making twinkies and ding-dongs and if we just shared the damned food, there'd be less of an issue.


I must be in a mood today.  I'm going to leave for a while.
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lady amarant

Quote from: Rebis on April 29, 2008, 03:12:32 PM
maybe if we didn't waste land on harvesting stupid crops like sugar, and if we didn't waste whatever the hell the ingredients of twinkies and ding-dongs are on making twinkies and ding-dongs and if we just shared the damned food, there'd be less of an issue.

I must be in a mood today.  I'm going to leave for a while.

I feel exactly the same way Reebs. What you say is absolutely true as well. There's more than enough to go around for everybody. Profit, politics and power ensure that it doesn't.

~Simone.
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tekla

Profit sounds bad, but no one is going to go out and do the hard work of farming for free.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
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lady amarant

Quote from: tekla on April 29, 2008, 03:23:37 PM
Profit sounds bad, but no one is going to go out and do the hard work of farming for free.

Hey, what can I say. I'm an anarcho-socialist.  ;D

~Simone.
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tekla

But are you a farm hand, able to do manual labor for say, 12 hours a day?  There is a reason that slavery was tied so close to agriculture.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
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NicholeW.

Quote from: tekla on April 29, 2008, 03:23:37 PM
Profit sounds bad, but no one is going to go out and do the hard work of farming for free.

And therein lies the rub. Why the push for ethanol in spite of the energy used in production of a gallon is nearly equal to the energy produced by the gallon produced?

Have you ever noticed fields in most of the USA? Corn followed by soybeans. There is very little else besides animal farming done in the USA. We produce tremendous amounts of corn, especially. For years we have relied on corn to grow beef and pigs and chickens and the Japanese to use our soy crops.

Farmers, what few remain that are not working directly for Con-agra and other industrial farm corporations, are consistently loosing money. They do lots of soy and corn. How to make them profitable? Ethanol.

Problem is that when the farmers pull the grain from food producers to sell to ethanol producers the prices for food goes up. Less grain to feed the animals, fewer farmers producing food crops. The third world problem is along the same lines -- many counties only have a GDP because of their commodities. Ethanol helps their bottom line, although the people starve.

As for water and arable land, yes, those problems have already become acute. And you don't have to look to sub-Saharan or Saharan Africa to find them. Check out the water-rights issue for the past forty years in the Colorado River Basin. The World Bank doesn't lend money for infrastructure improvements, like irrigation and aqueducts. The countries pressed have nothing to pay for the improvements with. Thus, the land dries out and in the meantime Indonesia and Brazil burn rain-forest, heightening much of the rainfall problem.

One thing that seems certainly true about industro-technological capitalism is that problem-solving is not their forte. Often their problem-solving makes for more acute problems twenty-five years on. Simply because, I think, capitalism is a very 'in-the-moment-focussed' system. What's good for this quarter is often very bad for a twenty-five year view. 

N~


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lisagurl

Corn is not a good feed for beef. It makes the cows sick then they pump in antibiotics. Corn is used as sugar in most processed food because the chemically produced corn sweetener is cheaper than sugar. Grass feed beef and livestock are much healthier and leaner meat. They just take longer to add weight. Sugar cane is used in Brazil to make fuel because it produces 8 times the amount ethanol per pound than corn. The US has few places sugar cane grows well.
  •  

NicholeW.

The fact that corn, another 'grass' is not burned as efficiently by cows as is grass makes little difference in what feed the cows are fed.

And yes, corn syrup of various grades is used as a sweetner & a lot of corn is used to that end.
N~
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Sister Seagull

Quote from: tekla on April 29, 2008, 01:45:22 PM

"The human instinct is to survive, and people are going to do no matter what to survive. And if you're hungry you get angry quicker."

Absolutely true.  And perhaps what we need is a little more inconvenience... maybe we need more people going hungry, losing their jobs, losing their homes.  We need some "real" anger. We have so much misplaced anger in the USA... maybe it's time to focus that anger into something that can bring positive change, instead of continuing down the road of complete apathy and indifference.

I've long said that if you take away the American peoples' "opiates" (television, toys, conveniences) and make them have to think for themselves and fend for themselves a little bit instead of being so constantly distracted, we would have a revolution.

Maybe it's overdue...

It sounds brutal, but it's the kick in the ass we all need.
  •  

Shana A

Quote from: tekla on April 29, 2008, 03:23:37 PM
Profit sounds bad, but no one is going to go out and do the hard work of farming for free.

Unfortunately, the farmers aren't making money for their efforts, the middlemen are.

Z
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


  •  

lisagurl

QuoteThe fact that corn, another 'grass' is not burned as efficiently by cows as is grass makes little difference in what feed the cows are fed.

Read the "Omnivore's Dilemma" by Michael Pollan, the NY Times food editor

"In my grandfather's time, cows were four or five years old at slaughter," Rish explained. "In the fifties, when my father was ranching, it was two or three years old.Now we get there at fourteen to sixteen months. Fast food, indeed. What gets a steer from 80 to 1100 pounds in fourteen months are tremendous quantities of corn, protein and fat supplements, and an arsenal of new drugs.

Corn is a genetically domesticated grass that does not and can not grow without human assistance. The drugs keep the cow from getting sick on the corn.
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