How the Free Market Leads to Famines

by: Laurent Pinsolle  |  Marianne2

How the Free Market Leads to Famines
Malawi farmers Mr. and Mrs. Nyirienda. The little African country of Malawi "imported 40 percent of its food in 2005, but the development of agricultural subsidies to the agricultural sector has transformed this country, since it now exports 50 percent of its production after "tripling its corn production in just four years." (Photo: Find Your Feet / flickr)

The Economist's latest article on global developments in agriculture involuntarily provides arguments for critics of free trade: the stampede for poor countries' lands, price volatility and, above all, the success of national policies for food self-sufficiency. Laurent Pinsolle tells you more about it.

In its November 21 issue, The Economist looks into the fascinating theme of agriculture and wonders what we shall do to feed the world. Although it supports deregulation, the uber-capitalist free market weekly nonetheless provides arguments for its opponents.

Of course, this issue provides the opportunity for the British magazine to decry the limits set on market mechanisms. In fact, when faced with the 2007 surge in agricultural product prices, many countries took radical measures, such as forbidding exports, a policy which ricocheted, provoking serious crises in importing countries. The upsurge in prices provoked a historic increase of about a hundred million in the number of malnourished people in the world.

The Economist makes itself the advocate of free trade in agricultural markets and calls for the suppression of tariff and other trade barriers recently established. Yet, its exposition of this issue clearly shows that market mechanisms lead to the dramas we've experienced for several months. In fact, the invisible hand leads to concentration in production that makes prices for agricultural products more volatile, threatening the planet's poorest populations.

Even worse, The Economist spends quite a bit of time reviewing the phenomenon of the purchase of arable lands in Third World countries by agricultural product importers, such as China, South Korea or the oil-exporting countries. No less than 20 million hectares of the best lands in poor countries of Africa and Asia have been purchased in this way by richer countries, seriously handicapping those countries' ability to develop their own agriculture ...

Paradoxically, The Economist develops examples that demonstrate the value of public intervention. It cites the case of Malawi. This little African country imported 40 percent of its food in 2005. But the development of agricultural subsidies to the agricultural sector (amounting to 4 percent of GDP) has transformed this country, since it now exports 50 percent of its produce after having tripled its corn production in just four years. In the same way, following rice shortages, today the Philippines are zeroing in on self-sufficiency.

The overall dossier shows one thing very clearly: market liberalization leads to specialization and concentration in production, which makes agricultural prices more volatile. In fact, with a more concentrated market, the slightest incident in the big producing countries provokes major tension that may make prices soar or collapse. Even when socializing agricultural production is not the issue, less concentration may give stability to the system.

That's why self-sufficiency still has a bright future before it and the odds are that, in spite of the WTO, many countries, including developing countries, will prefer to regulate their domestic market to allow their agriculture to develop, an essential phase in economic development. And in any event, the predictable rise in carbon prices will end up making trade in agricultural products more expensive, which would have to promote relocalization of that activity.

The free trade record is there: the number of people suffering from malnutrition in the world has been increasing since 1995. Consequently, it is high time to return to a more local and more stable vision of agriculture that benefits everyone.

Translation: Truthout French Language Editor Leslie Thatcher
 

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Comments

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I hope the lack of comments

I hope the lack of comments is just an East Coast blog-catch-up phenomenon . . . this is our future, folks. Monsanto and the other multi-national bullies had better not think they can run us off . . .


What if it is indifference

What if it is indifference to the plight of the starving


Mike Davis' book 'The Late

Mike Davis' book 'The Late Victorian Holocausts' details very well how 'free markets' and imperialism leads to famines along with the help of particularly the El Nino weather cycles. Reading that is not for the squeamish.


There are bright spots,

There are bright spots, seeds of hope. They range from the Malawian government's forward-looking policies to local farmers' markets in the USA. If wealthy consumers (that's us) refrain, or at least curtail, our purchases of food and flowers grown in far distant places, that can begin to shrink the pressure on developing countries to turn to market agriculture to solve their economic woes. That might enable some to look more closely at the efficacy of their own agricultural self-sufficiency, as well as the opportunity to preserve some of their own forests.


Quite frankly, there are

Quite frankly, there are just too many people in regions where the level of civilization is not up to the task of sustaining them.


Quite frankly:you probably

Quite frankly:you probably will support the new UN resolution declaring TM soya, african palm,farmers, "clean" farm producers entitled to receive U.N. new moneys on top of the billions they receive in subsidies,causing more indigenous people to be evicted from their ancestral lands,their primeval forests to be chop down,so you can keep feeling more civilized, while driving your S.U.V. on "biological" fuel.enjoy the world while it last! shame on you!


I don't like subsidies, as

I don't like subsidies, as they always seem to have unintended consequences. My guess is that Malawi's subsidies originate with American and European taxpayers. As a city boy, I don't have much use for an SUV. As for primeval forests, I like them enough to support cutting the world's population by a factor of ten, thereby giving nature a much-needed break.


I am curious as to how

I am curious as to how Malawi increased its agricultural production or what it did to go from importing to exporting agricultural products. The implication of the article is that Malawi is now using its agricultural lands for self-sufficiency rather than export--yet export rates have increased (and apparently that's a good thing). There is no information as to how that happened: is Malawi employing unsustainable (high input) agricultural practices, i.e., utilizing synthetic fertilizers, petroleum-based pesticides/insecticides/fungicides? Is Malawi using GMO seed? No information is provided. The so-called green revolution utilized all of those practices and also resulted in the loss of many varieties of staple crops (rice, etc.,( that were uniquely suited through years of breeding, to hundreds of microclimates in many "developing nations" because the hybrids developed by large corporations were advocated,, heavily marketed & sometimes substituted as a condition of aid receipt (that could be technology assistance/aid). I can't tell from the information in this article what means Malawi has utilized-and it may have utilized more than one. Subsidies alone might or might not have achieved Malawi's result. For years I've thought that the US should refuse to sell agricultural land to non-citizens or legal residents and I do not include multi-national corporations in my definition of "citizen or legal resident." Given the dominance of the multinational corporation in the US, (despite how "patriotic" we're supposed to be) I doubt if that will happen. Just like it doesn't seem to matter much to Congress that a few multi-nationals are doing their best to control the food supply via control of seed genetic makeup. Monsanto, I'm talking about you.


Awesome posting man! You are

Awesome posting man!
You are a great blogger. I like your work. Truly you are a genius.
Keep up the good work Man!!

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