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Other Voices
08:48 AM CDT on Monday, April 21, 2008
Hunger threat
While the United States has been focusing on new security threats such as terrorism and bioweapons, an ancient cause of human strife is re-emerging.
Global hunger was supposed to have been tamed by the Green Revolution, freer markets and wealthier consumers, but the World Bank now estimates that 33 countries are gripped by unrest because of soaring food and energy prices.
In just two months, rice prices have risen 75 percent globally, and wheat prices are up 120 percent compared with a year ago.
That’s a calamity for the billion people who live in extreme poverty — and for many of their governments. This month alone, food riots have broken out in Indonesia, the Philippines and Cameroon.
The U.N. World Food Program has called for $500 million in emergency donations, and President Bush responded recently with $200 million. Despite flak from the farm lobby, the White House is sticking to its position that the food should be purchased locally, where possible, to cut the transportation and distribution costs that can eat up half of the food-aid budget.
To stretch the aid money further, Congress should buck the labor unions and lift the requirement that American food aid be shipped on U.S.-flagged vessels.
But short-term emergency aid won’t be enough. There are many causes for the run-up in prices: drought and disease, probably worsened by climate change; rising demand in India and China; rising demand for crops to make biofuels, which some developing countries call a “crime against humanity”; the fall of the U.S. dollar, which makes dollar-denominated food more costly; and speculators pulling money out of the stock market and real estate derivatives, and pouring it into the commodities market.
Some of the best thinking about the global food problem is being done at the World Bank under its activist new president, Robert H. Zoellick. He has doubled agricultural assistance to Africa and is calling for a “new deal” that combines emergency food aid with long-term efforts to boost production in developing nations.
An accomplished former deputy secretary of State and U.S. trade representative, Zoellick knows a thing or two about how protectionism distorts international markets.
He shouldn’t hesitate to haul his bully pulpit up to Capitol Hill and ask Congress to correct some of the most misguided U.S. agricultural policies — starting with the expensive and environmentally destructive farm bill.
Los Angeles Times




