Dari Dawn Pakistan kito baco, disalin tanpa izin untuak dibaco Rang Lapau.

May 05, 2008  Monday  Rabi-us-Sani 28, 1429  


Surge in food prices may undo gains of a decade

 MADRID, May 4: Soaring food prices may throw millions of people back into 
poverty in Asia and undo gains of a decade, regional leaders said on Sunday 
while calling for increased agricultural production to meet rising demand.

Asia --- home to two thirds of the world's poor --- faces growing social unrest 
as a doubling of wheat and rice prices in the last year has hurt people 
spending more than half their income on food, Japanese Finance Minister 
Fukushiro Nukaga said during the Asian Development Bank's annual meeting.

If food prices rise 20 per cent, 100 million poor people across Asia could be 
forced back into extreme poverty, warned Indian Finance Secretary D. Subba Rao. 
"In many countries that will mean the undoing of gains in poverty reduction 
achieved in the past decade of growth," Rao told the ADB's meeting in Madrid.

A 43 per cent rise in global food prices in the year to March sparked violent 
protests in Cameroon and Burkina Faso as well as rallies in Indonesia following 
reports of starvation deaths.

Many governments have introduced food subsidies or export restrictions to 
counter rising costs, but they have only exacerbated price rises on global 
markets, Nukaga said. "Those hardest hit are the poorest segments of the 
population, especially the urban poor," he told delegates.

"It will have a negative impact on their living standards and their nutrition, 
a situation that may lead to social unrest and distrust," he added.

The ADB estimates the very poorest people in the Asia Pacific region spend 60 
per cent of their income on food and a further 15 per cent on fuel --- the key 
basic commodities of life which have seen their prices rise relentlessly in the 
last year.

Japan is one of 67 ADB member economies gathered in Spain to discuss measures 
to counter severe weather and rising demand that have ended decades of cheap 
food in developing nations.The Asia-Pacific has three times the population of 
Europe --- around 1.5 billion people --- living on less than $2 a day.

Rice is a staple food in most Asian nations and any shortage threatens 
instability, making governments extremely sensitive to its price.

High inflation, driven by food and raw material costs, has topped the agenda of 
the ADB's annual meeting.

The bank on Saturday called for immediate action from global governments to 
combat soaring food prices and twinned it with a pledge of fresh financial aid 
to help feed the Asia Pacific region's poorest nations.

--Reuters



      
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