The Economist: The New Face of Hunger

Global food shortages have taken everyone by surprise. What is to be done?

SAMAKE BAKARY sells rice from wooden basins at Abobote market in the northern suburbs of Abidjan in Côte d'Ivoire. He points to a bowl of broken Thai rice which, at 400 CFA francs (roughly $1) per kilogram, is the most popular variety. On a good day he used to sell 150 kilos. Now he is lucky to sell half that. “People ask the price and go away without buying anything,” he complains. In early April they went away and rioted: two days of violence persuaded the government to postpone planned elections.

“World agriculture has entered a new, unsustainable and politically risky period,” says Joachim von Braun, the head of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in Washington, DC. To prove it, food riots have erupted in countries all along the equator. In Haiti, protesters chanting “We're hungry” forced the prime minister to resign; 24 people were killed in riots in Cameroon; Egypt's president ordered the army to start baking bread; the Philippines made hoarding rice punishable by life imprisonment. “It's an explosive situation and threatens political stability,” worries Jean-Louis Billon, president of Côte d'Ivoire's chamber of commerce….

The article goes on to highlight multiple nuances of the food problem. A related article is The silent tsunami

PICTURES of hunger usually show passive eyes and swollen bellies. The harvest fails because of war or strife; the onset of crisis is sudden and localised. Its burden falls on those already at the margin.

Today's pictures are different. “This is a silent tsunami,” says Josette Sheeran of the World Food Programme, a United Nations agency. A wave of food-price inflation is moving through the world, leaving riots and shaken governments in its wake. For the first time in 30 years, food protests are erupting in many places at once. Bangladesh is in turmoil (see article); even China is worried (see article). Elsewhere, the food crisis of 2008 will test the assertion of Amartya Sen, an Indian economist, that famines do not happen in democracies.

Famine traditionally means mass starvation. The measures of today's crisis are misery and malnutrition. The middle classes in poor countries are giving up health care and cutting out meat so they can eat three meals a day. The middling poor, those on $2 a day, are pulling children from school and cutting back on vegetables so they can still afford rice. Those on $1 a day are cutting back on meat, vegetables and one or two meals, so they can afford one bowl. The desperate—those on 50 cents a day—face disaster. …


Comments

4 responses to “The new face of hunger”

  1. And the US wants to use corn for bio-diesel fuel which cuts into our exports, trade imbalance and hurts the consumer here and abroad.
    All that and it’s more polluting than regular diesel as well.
    Alan

  2. Not to mention cropland that is diverted in emerging nations toward production of this fuel. It leads to more deforestation and threats to habitat.
    I think one of the pieces to the puzzle is the distorted prices kept in place by Western subsidized agriculture and protectionism in the West against foreign foods. A combination of factors from rising energy costs, to a net negative interest rate (interest rate less the inflation rate), to a global increased demand for food have run headlong into this unrealistic market situation created by the West. I suspect food prices will restabilize, albeit at an increased level, but not before some gyrations as markets try to realign themselves to reality.
    But then again, we could all just be going to Hell in a hand basket. 🙂

  3. But Michael, didn’t Brian just tell us that we need more government oversight? So there can’t be anything wrong with mandates and subsidies for biofuels. It’s green and sustainable, so it must be good. Who are we to say different? It’s not about freedom, it’s about what’s fair. And they understand what’s fair better than the rest of us.
    Speaking of “green,” I just read about this new government research food development called Soylent Green. Michael, we must be willing to sacrifice for the COMMON GOOD!

  4. ROTFL
    “The Soylent Green Party”
    Our motto:
    “Seeking only the common good.”
    I love it!

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