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DEVELOPMENT: Food Crisis Symptom of Dubious Liberalisation Analysis by Aileen Kwa GENEVA, May 12 (IPS) - The high food prices that have sparked riots in many parts of the developing world - from
Indonesia, India and Bangladesh to Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire and Haiti - should come as no
surprise. These are only the latest in a series of events many developing countries have
suffered as a result of opening their borders and neglecting domestic agriculture.
A large number of developing countries have conscientiously implemented World Bank and
International Monetary Fund (IMF) conditions and World Trade Organisation (WTO)
commitments. They have applied the given structural adjustment policies - and have
seen the damaging consequences to their domestic agricultural sector.
The consequence has been the certain erosion of their capacity to produce their own food.
In the era of stronger state control in the 1970s and even the early 1980s, domestic food
markets in the developing world were often in the hands of state marketing boards and
cooperatives. Marketing boards would guarantee floor prices, and provide fertilisers and
seeds. They also controlled import volumes, redistributed food where there were
production shortfalls, and purchased commodities from cooperatives.
These marketing boards were not always run in the best possible way; there were many
instances of corruption or inefficiency, but they did fulfil certain critical functions. Farmers
were provided a market to sell their produce to, which meant they had a livelihood. Prices
were stable even though they were often lower than what farmers would have liked.
As a result of these policies, many developing countries were either net food exporters, or
at least were nearly food self-sufficient.
All that has changed over the last 20 years. Investment support to farmers was done away
with. Small farmers were told to produce for the international market, and their markets
were opened to producers from outside. Rather than supporting staple crops, government
support went to the export sector. Since all would specialise in the products where they
had 'comparative advantage', gains were supposed to accrue all round.
But rather than producing winners, millions of the poorest subsistence farmers were
knocked out of their own markets. Imports took over what was previously produced by
local people. Over the last 20 years, the production capacity in many countries has
severely diminished.
The Philippines has been one prime example of such policies. "During the 60s and 70s, we
were self-sufficient," Jowen Berber of Centro Saka, an NGO working on agrarian issues
with farmers, told IPS. "That was the time that the government was heavily investing in
rice - irrigation, infrastructure, marketing support and production support such as
credits and inputs. But when the government stopped those incentives and subsidies, rice
production slowly decreased."
Berber said "the acreage of irrigated land has also been falling because the government
has not been maintaining irrigation facilities. We also have a very high level of post-
harvest losses in rice - up to 35 percent because our post-harvest facilities are very old."
Instead of supporting farmers with guaranteed prices as before, Berber said "the
government now intervenes to buy less than 1 percent of the domestic rice that is
produced. They are buying more imported rice than our own local rice."
A study on import surges by David Pingpoh and Joean Senahoun, commissioned by the
UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) in 2006, noted that the Cameroon
government support to the rice sector was removed in 1994 through implementation of
IMF and World Bank policies. The fertiliser market was privatised. Rice yields of poor
farmers dropped as fertilisers became unaffordable. Tariffs were liberalised, and annual
rice imports doubled from 152,000 tonnes to 301,000 tonnes between 1999 and 2004.
This opening rendered the country vulnerable to the policies of other countries. At the
time, India was de-stocking its rice surplus, and rice imports from India increased from
7,900 tonnes in 2001 to 60,300 tonnes in 2002. As a result of this import surge, rice
farmers were hard hit, and many left the sector. Land for rice cultivation dropped 31.2
percent between 1999 and 2004.
According to the FAO, Cote d'Ivoire also saw imports flooding in when the market was
opened up. As a result of implementing commitments at the WTO, Cote d'Ivoire removed
import restrictions on key agricultural goods, particularly rice. Duty on all agricultural
products was set at a maximum of 15 percent, except for 25 tariff lines.
As a result, rice imports increased at an annual rate of 6 percent from 470,000 tonnes to
715,000 tonnes between 1997 and 2004. Imports were mainly from Thailand, China and
India. Domestic production dropped 40 percent over this period.
In Nepal, the civil society organisation ActionAid documents that rice import surges came
in 1994, 1996 and 2000, with imports increasing by 175 percent, 55 percent and 800
percent respectively. From 24,500 tonnes imported in 1999, by the year 2000 imports had
hit 195,000 tonnes. The porous borders between Nepal and India, and the Nepal-India
Trade Treaty were widely seen as the cause of these surges. In certain areas of Nepal,
domestic prices fell by nearly 20 percent. The southern belt bordering India saw a
multitude of rice plants and rice mills shutting down.
Today, in the latest twist of events, food prices have increased due to global shortfalls.
Food production has been redirected towards biofuel production. Drought in Australia has
contributed to shortages on the world market. Speculators playing on commodity markets
have further increased prices.
Up to 37 countries have been gripped by protests and riots. In Cameroon, seven people
were killed in the unrest in February. Food riots also took hold of Abidjan in the Cote
d'Ivoire in March this year.
At meetings in Berne in Switzerland to address the global food crisis, UN Secretary-
General Ban Ki-Moon, World Bank president Robert Zollick and WTO director-general
Pascal Lamy again made a plea for more free trade the panacea. But farmers remain
unconvinced that more of the same policies that have contributed to the last two decades
of destruction of agriculture can help.
Reacting to the push by the WTO leadership, the World Bank and the UN to stitch up the
Doha Round so that further liberalisation can assist in resolving the food crisis, Henri
Saragih, international coordinator of the global network of peasant farmers La Via
Campesina writes, "Protecting food has become a crime under free trade rules.
Protectionism has become a dirty word. Meanwhile, countries have become addicted to
cheap food imports, and now that prices are shooting up, hunger is raising its ugly head." (END/2008)
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