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<http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/06/26/9902/>
Published on Thursday, June 26, 2008 by Foreign Policy in Focus

Africa's Unnatural Disaster

by Sameer Dossani

While the mainstream media doesn't always ignore the pressing issue 
of hunger in Africa, it rarely explores the root causes of this 
problem. Behind most news on the issue, there's an assumption that 
casts hunger as a natural result of unfortunate weather conditions, 
coupled with bureaucratic inefficiency and bad economic planning.

With this in mind, in 2005 the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation 
announced a plan to "help millions of small-scale farmers lift 
themselves out of poverty and hunger." In the years since, the 
foundation has been joined in its efforts by a number of other 
organizations that have founded the Alliance for a Green Revolution 
in Africa (AGRA).

According to AGRA's website:

AGRA programs develop practical solutions to significantly boost farm 
productivity and incomes for the poor while safeguarding the 
environment. AGRA advocates for policies that support its work across 
all key aspects of the African agricultural "value chain"-from seeds, 
soil health, and water to markets and agricultural educationŠ. A root 
cause ofŠ entrenched and deepening poverty is the fact that millions 
of small-scale farmers-the majority of them women working farms 
smaller than one hectare-cannot grow enough food to sustain their 
families, their communities, or their countries.

AGRA's assumptions - and those of the mainstream media - rest on the 
premise that the Africa's hunger problem is one of production. While 
production may be part of the story, it's far from the complete 
picture. The heart of the agriculture crisis that Africa and the 
world are currently experiencing lies in the failed policy paradigm 
promoted by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, 
institutions that still have enormous control over economic policy in 
many African countries.

World Bank Role

The World Bank's intervention in African agriculture began in 1981 
with the study Accelerated Development in Sub-Saharan Africa: An 
Agenda for Action. Also known as the Berg Report, the study paved the 
way for World Bank involvement in the African agriculture sectors. 
The Berg Report prescriptions represent the first incarnation of the 
market fundamentalist policies that have been dominant in the African 
agricultural sector thereafter.

Since the Berg report, the World Bank has insisted on market 
liberalization and privatization of Africa's agricultural markets. 
Subsidies of all kinds have decreased since 1981 and most state 
marketing boards and crop authorities have been greatly weakened or 
eliminated. No one - including the World Bank - denies that the net 
result of this policy is to expose small farmers to increased shocks. 
But the World Bank argues that shocks may be beneficial, in that 
exposure to actual market fluctuations will lead small farmers to 
grow high-value export crops instead of low value crops for local 
consumption. This "rational peasant" theory, as it was known in the 
1980s, argued that small farmers shifting to high value exports such 
as coffee, sugar, cut flowers, etc. would ultimately bring in more 
money to the domestic economy, enabling rapid growth and development.

Market Fundamentalism

This theory - that government regulation should get be eliminated so 
that the market can do its job of "getting the prices right" - 
underlines World Bank thinking not only in the 1981 Berg report but 
also in their 2008 World Development Report, titled Agriculture for 
Development. Twenty years of the same failed policies are apparently 
not enough for the World Bank to change its tune.

The World Bank's continued market fundamentalism is difficult to 
understand, especially in light of the fact that after more than 25 
years of imposing these policies in Africa and Latin America, success 
stories are few and far between. Those countries that do have 
productive agricultural sectors (almost none of which are in Africa) 
either rely on huge landholders to be productive (Brazil, Argentina, 
Chile) or on massive subsidies (India) or both (U.S., EU). The 
countries that have eliminated their subsidies and privatized their 
grain boards, including many in Africa, are those that are doing the 
poorest.

In fairness, one or two changes can be seen in the World Bank's 
thinking between 1981 and today. The first can be seen as an 
admission of failure - migration to more developed countries and the 
subsequent flow of remittances to families left behind, is mentioned 
as part of a strategy for reducing rural poverty (p. 73). While this 
is certainly true in the current global economy, there are few who 
would argue that forced migration is a path to development. Anecdotal 
evidence suggests that remittances may have a slightly greater 
correlation to development than the correlation between aid and 
development, but this is hardly high praise, considering the failures 
of the aid programs of the last 30 years.

The second concession that the 2008 WDR makes to reality (as opposed 
to market fundamentalist ideology) is an allowance for targeted 
subsidies. While subsidies have historically been a four-letter word 
for the World Bank, in recent years the Bank has come under fire for 
insisting on market liberalization in developing countries while 
acknowledging that developed countries have much higher subsidies 
than those in African countries. The World Bank's answer to this is 
to continue to talk about various kinds of subsidies that distort 
trade and the need to stay away from those policies, while 
simultaneously allowing for the possibility of targeted subsidies to 
help the poorest of farmers who may be the most vulnerable to price 
shocks. This may be a step forward, but it is a small one and does 
little to relieve the burden of over 20 years of lost African 
development for which the World Bank bears a large share of 
responsibility.

The Real World

If one is willing to look at the events of the last 30 years without 
the quasi-religious belief that free markets lead to development and 
growth, one would undoubtedly find that the opposite is true. In his 
groundbreaking work Kicking Away the Ladder (2003), Ha Joon Chang 
documents the development of every industrialized country, showing 
that protectionist policies were a fundamental part of development 
strategy in almost every case. The process of development that 
emerges from this story is not maximizing comparative advantage (for 
if so, the U.S. would be a sparsely populated country of fur traders 
and fisher people) but rather shifting comparative advantage to high 
value goods through calculated market distortions. In the case of the 
U.K. and the United States, those market distortions originally came 
in the form of colonialism and slavery. But market distortions 
continue in the U.S. today in the form of agriculture and steel 
subsidies, not to mention the tremendous government spending on 
biotechnology and defense, which largely serves as a subsidy for 
those sectors.

In light of these fundamentals of developmental economics, the World 
Development Report 2008 can be seen as an ideological continuation of 
the failed agricultural policies of the last 20 years, without an 
adequate analysis of why that period has been a failure for countries 
who would rely on agricultural exports as a path to development. The 
report does point out that a few countries (Brazil and Chile are the 
examples given) have successfully used agriculture to increase 
growth, but in Brazil and (to a lesser extent) Chile, small farmers 
are all but extinct, and agriculture is big business. Given the 
preoccupation with small farmers and poverty alleviation in other 
parts of the document, the examples are odd.

In addition to the failures of the free-market paradigm, the ongoing 
crisis of food prices has exposed global agricultural production as a 
disaster. Since about 1970, the World Bank, other international 
financial institutions and the private sector have succeeded in 
completely transforming agriculture from a primarily local affair to 
a complex industrialized process. Monocropping, over-reliance on 
chemical pesticides and fertilizers and trans-genetic manipulation 
have in some cases increased yields; but these practices have not led 
to a significant reduction in the number of hungry people in the 
world. The recommendations of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in 
Africa and the World Bank amount to insanity - recommending more of 
the same and expecting better results.

Perhaps most shocking is that this new push towards increased 
globalization and industrialization is occurring at precisely at the 
moment when many in the United States are moving towards a diet that 
is both local - produced somewhere in the vicinity of where it is 
consumed - and organic - produced without the use of synthetic 
hormones, chemical fertilizers, pesticides, and genetic modification.

In the United States, Europe and elsewhere, many are beginning to 
understand that industrialized agriculture benefits neither those who 
produce nor those who consume food. In the current food crisis, more 
than 25 countries and the European Union have imposed tariffs, 
subsidies, price controls or other measures to protect consumers from 
the global free market. So why the double standard when it comes to 
Africa?

For those interested in solutions, the organic and local movements 
aren't far off the mark. What producers and consumers in many parts 
of the world are beginning to understand is that the way that farmers 
have been growing food for millennia is more or less a good system. 
While there may be room for technology, (drip irrigation systems, for 
example) that innovation should not alter the food product nor add 
layers of cost.

Many parts of Africa have an advantage in that they have never really 
lost their traditional relationships with the land. The problem has 
been that cheaper food from Europe and the United States is often 
dumped on African countries, undercutting the possibility for farmers 
to earn a living from their production. In the case of Africa, all 
that may be needed is a sensible trade policy to protect those who 
already grow enough food for all Africans.

Sameer Dossani, a Foreign Policy In Focus contributor, is the 
director of 50 Years is Enough and blogs at 
shirinandsameer.blogspot.com. This commentary is adapted from a 
longer paper soon to be published by Africa Action.

Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies


>   http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi?file=/views02/0522-03.htm
>   
>   Published on Wednesday, May 22, 2002 in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer
>   
>       A Better Way to Feed the Hungry
>       by Frances Moore Lappé and Anna Lappé
>            Bill Gates thinks he's got a brilliant idea: fighting 
>malnutrition abroad by fortifying food.
>   The scheme, backed with $50 million from the Gates Foundation, in 
>part encourages Proctor & Gamble, Philip Morris' Kraft, and other 
>companies to develop vitamin and iron-fortified processed foods. It 
>then facilitates their entry into Third World markets.
>   Gates seems to believe we don't have time to address the complex 
>social and political roots of malnutrition. But in opting for this 
>single-focus, top-down, technical intervention, Gates can end up 
>hurting the very people he wants to help.
>   His strategy ignores a crucial reality: Many, if not most, of the 
>hungriest people in the world are themselves farmers. They eke out a 
>living by selling what they grow, and eating it. Helping foreign 
>food purveyors penetrate their markets will only further rob them of 
>livelihood. For example, India's dairy cooperatives -- many run by 
>poor women -- would be hard-pressed to withstand the onslaught of 
>Kraft's marketing power.
>   The Gates approach also hurts the poor if it shifts tastes toward 
>processed foods -- typically adding fat, sugar, and salt while 
>removing needed fiber and micronutrients. This diet trend already 
>contributes to the spread of diseases currently burdening the 
>industrial world. Obesity and diet-related diseases including 
>diabetes, heart disease, and cancer are becoming a global crisis. In 
>the Third World, grossly insufficient health care budgets are now 
>being diverted to treat these conditions, and away from treating 
>deadly infectious diseases.
>   Aiding market penetration by global food processing companies also 
>ends up making consumers dependent on foreign suppliers for life's 
>essentials. But while corporations such as Kraft or Proctor & Gamble 
>might well participate in Gates' do-good scheme, ultimately their 
>interests diverge from those of the hungry. By law, theirs is 
>assuring the highest return to their shareholders -- foreigners -- 
>not the improved well-being of local people, and certainly not 
>hungry local people too poor to make their needs felt in the market.
>   Even the piece of the Gates scheme focused on fortifying grain 
>(presumably locally grown) misses critical lessons learned since the 
>first World Food Conference in Rome declared war on global hunger 
>almost three decades ago.
>   Then, many still believed that hunger could be solved by simple, 
>mass-production approaches. After decades of failed, 
>technologically-driven solutions, a new wisdom is emerging.
>   We recently traveled on five continents, witnessing a heartening 
>array of local initiatives addressing the complex, interwoven roots 
>of needless malnutrition. These are not pie-in-the-sky solutions; 
>they are working.
>   In 1993 Brazil's fourth largest city, Belo Horizonte, declared 
>food a right of citizenship. This single shift of frame -- beyond 
>charitable hand-outs, beyond market tyranny -- unleashed dozens of 
>innovations: Making city plots available for local, organic farmers 
>as long as they keep prices within the reach of the poor; posting 
>where to find the cheapest prices for over 40 food staples; 
>enhancing nutrition in school lunches by replacing processed foods 
>with local organic food. The city also tries to innoculate newly 
>arrived dwellers against global corporate food advertising (probably 
>including that of the very companies in the Gates fold) by educating 
>them to the value of sticking with the healthy whole foods diets 
>they grew up on in the countryside.
>   Across the globe in Kenya, women of the Green Belt Movement, an 
>anti-desertification campaign that has planted 20 million trees, are 
>now reclaiming diverse, traditional food crops. They are creating 
>organic kitchen gardens growing precisely the fruits and vegetables 
>that provide the nutrients Gates' fortification scheme seeks to 
>supply.
>   A promising international "fair trade" movement now also addresses 
>the powerlessness that leaves people malnourished in the first 
>place. Third World producers can market fair trade products, such as 
>coffee certified by Oakland-based Transfair USA, helping to ensure 
>the livelihood of some of the world's poorest people.
>   Tens of thousands of such innovative efforts, many citizen driven, 
>continue to emerge on every continent. They are succeeding because 
>they address the real causes of malnutrition -- concentrated 
>economic and political power that blocks people from pursuing their 
>interests and from building vibrant, sustainable local economies, 
>accountable to local needs.
>   Just imagine what might happen if Bill Gates chose not to fortify 
>corporate foods but to use his $50 million to fortify efforts like 
>these, encouraging their cross-fertilization and replication. With 
>nutrient deficiencies stunting the lives of at least two billion 
>people we can't afford ill-considered strategies that will hurt 
>rather than help.
>   Frances Moore Lappé and Anna Lappé are authors of "Hope's Edge: 
>The Next Diet for a Small Planet" www.dietforasmallplanet.com.
>   ©1999-2002 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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