Opinion

The political economy and the global food crisis

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By TEE NGUGI
Posted  Wednesday, August 20  2008 at  19:46

In Summary

  • The solutions offered by the delegates at the Rome food summit confirmed a continuing faith in interventions that have failed to address the fundamental cause of food emergencies.
  • Over the last 50 years, technology has increased world food production by 30 per cent, yet the number of hungry people has continued to grow.
  • The State offers little, if any, social protection measures that would assist those trapped in poverty.

In the latter part of the 18th century, hungry masses poured into the streets of Paris demonstrating against a shortage of bread – their staple. Informed of this, Queen Marie Antoinette offered: ‘‘Let them eat cake’’.

Who would have thought that in June 2008, world leaders meeting in Rome to discuss the international food crisis would give us a 21st century version of Antoinette’s attitude?

The solutions offered by the delegates, far from being radical departures from the past, confirmed a continuing faith in interventions that have failed to address the fundamental cause of food emergencies.

Reduced to their bare minimum, all the solutions translated into one – increase food production.

Increasing food production will admittedly have the effect of making food both cheaper and available. But cheaper and available for whom?

For the agricultural boards and the upper classes, yes. But poor people will still be unable to afford the food.

Over the last 50 years, technology has increased world food production by 30 per cent, yet the number of hungry people has continued to grow.

Even the assumption that increased food production would make food cheaper is not incontestable.

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Food prices are at the mercy of other internal and external factors. In effect, the poor would only be exchanging a situation in which there was no money and no food, for one in which there was food but no money to buy it.

The delegates, like Queen Antoinette and her class more than 200 years ago, failed to seize the historic opportunity to address the fundamental cause of hunger – poverty, and its supporting philosophical and systemic structures.

The way in which our societies are structured creates and maintains poverty, trapping generations in a vicious grip.

The State offers little, if any, social protection measures that would assist those trapped in poverty.

The neo-liberal philosophy that informs this structural inequity argues that the market, not the government, is the ‘‘great equaliser’’. If poor people were not benefiting, it was their own fault, owing to their penchant for self-destructive behaviour.

Neo-liberalism, a product of privileged elites, and supported by conservative religious and social movements, cannot see that the poor are structurally disadvantaged by the system.

So, while the upper classes can easily access credit, health and other services, poor people are largely left to fend for themselves.

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Add a comment (1 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Ireadlines

    Wow, If Namibians are that elitist as to be able to read and understand such a technically written peice, then America is no longer the great nation it was, now it is Namibia's time. 'Neo-liberals supported by conservatives'? That sounds more like an academic paper to me. But will, I am only a farmer out here in Eldoret, may be I am just undable to read it. poor me.

    Posted  August 21, 2008 12:03 PM