Brussels: In response to the deepening global food crisis the ITUC has
called on governments and world institutions to take far-reaching measures
to guarantee food security for all. "This is an opportunity to completely
revamp the failed policies which have led to this crisis, and it is vital
that governments and the global institutions do more than just fiddle at the
edges of a system which simply isn't delivering for the world's people",
said ITUC General Secretary Guy Ryder.
"The factors behind soaring food and agricultural commodity prices are
part of the same set of global policies which have resulted in massive
global financial instability and intensifying climate change, and these
three current global crises must be tackled through root and branch reform
and effective regulation that can deliver decent work. Large parts of the
global agricultural system are built upon poverty wages and violation of
workers' fundamental rights. No durable solution to the crisis can be found
unless the appalling worker rights record in global agriculture is
addressed", Ryder added.
The ITUC welcomes the announcement by the United Nations that a UN
Taskforce to tackle the global food crisis has been set up, to report to a
Summit in June. One urgent requirement is for industrialised country
governments to provide emergency grants and loans to developing countries
that need it to offset the impact of sharply higher food prices. These
should include funding of government programmes to provide basic foodstuffs
at low cost, as well as longer-term programmes to increase food production.
This would help compensate for two decades of structural adjustment
programmes from the IMF and World Bank, and the impacts of the WTO Agreement
on Agriculture which by "opening up markets" has had the effect of
consolidating the dominance of agrofood multinationals and orienting
developing country agriculture towards exporting food rather than building
production for their domestic markets..
According to the UN, food prices have risen 57% in one year - and far
more in the case of basic foodstuffs - and some 100 million people more than
last year are facing serious food shortages. The IMF and World Bank have
warned that hundreds of thousands could starve and that a decade of progress
in poverty reduction could be cancelled out. Food riots have already spread
to over 14 countries, including Haiti, Ivory Coast, Cameroon and Egypt and
dozens of people have died. Since higher food prices most strongly affect
those on the lower end of the income scale, inequality within countries will
increase even further unless vigorous action is taken to protect the
purchasing power of workers and the poor in developing countries.
The worsening crisis comes against a background of bleak announcements on
the world economic slowdown. The IMF said on April 9 that the current crisis
is the biggest financial shock since the great depression of the 1930s, and
suggested that a world-wide recession was possible. On the same day, the
World Bank published a report showing increased income inequality in 44 of
59 developing countries it surveyed, and concluded that countries in
Sub-Saharan Africa would not reach the Millennium Development Goals in spite
of recent strong economic growth in the region. Behind much of the growth
figures has been the further hollowing out of domestic agricultural
production, laying the grounds for the current crisis. Other regions are
lagging in achieving the MDGs on child and maternal mortality, education,
nutrition and sanitation.
Both the World Bank and the IMF, among others, bear responsibility for
the current crisis by encouraging countries to dismantle government-run
grain buffer stocks which could have played a vital role in alleviating
current food shortages, in the name of deregulation and liberalisation. Much
of the Bank's past focus in agriculture has been to encourage developing
country farmers to shift to export crops, which contributed to the scarcity
of basic foodstuffs for domestic consumption. The Bank has frequently
opposed state marketing boards, agricultural research and feed banks while
overseeing a systematic lack of investment in necessary infrastructure and
promoting the privatisation of water and the dismantling of tariffs which
generated revenue for support programmes, all leading to declining incomes
for rural producers.
More recently the World Bank has promoted a shift to biofuel crops that
constitutes another factor contributing to the worsening food shortages, a
shift welcomed and encouraged by a number of governments, including the EU,
Brazil and the US. The Director General of the UN's Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) Jacques Diouf said recently that 100 million tons of
cereals were being diverted for biofuel production and that the quantity was
estimated to increase 12-fold by 2017, while UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
called for a comprehensive review of policies on biofuels because the crisis
in global food prices is partly caused by the increasing use of crops for
energy generation and threatens to trigger global instability. The OECD has
suggested that the European Union's plans to obtain 10 percent of its
transport fuel from plants by 2020 will have little or no effect on climate
change, and has expressed doubts that the technical means exist to produce
biofuels without compromising the ability to feed a growing population.
Indeed, doubts are rapidly growing as to the potential contribution of
biofuels to mitigate climate change globally rather than exacerbating the
problem. The IUF, the Global Union Federation whose coverage includes
agriculture and food, has called for a moratorium on the expansion of
biofuel production pending a full assessment of the social, employment and
environmental impact. This call is set out as part of a broader analysis and
set of recommendations for action in the recent IUF statement
"Fuelling Hunger"
Climate change is another major part of the escalating problem. Droughts
are one of the main reasons for local food shortages and according to the
UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), climate change will
bring about increased droughts and desertification in some areas but heavier
rains and flooding in others. This will severely disrupt food and
agriculture systems all over the world and particularly in Southern Africa,
South Asia and Brazil.
The role of a handful of multinational corporations that now control most
the world's agricultural trade must also be borne in mind. Their effect has
been to "internationalise" production, consumption and prices of food which
has undermined national and local control over the very systems that are
supposed to feed people. A small number of commodity trading companies and
primary processors are exercising tremendous market power in global markets.
These, along with food producing multinationals, many of which are
integrated into energy and chemical companies, are reaping record profits
while increasing numbers of people go hungry.
According to the FAO, long term approaches are needed to identify and
address the root causes of food insecurity, including control and ownership
patterns over land, agricultural inputs, distribution systems, as well as
trade and commodity pricing and speculation. The UN Environment Programme
UNEP has also pointed to the role of food-price speculation in global
markets as a key factor in the crisis, and has called for a move towards
sustainable agriculture as part of the solution - echoing a long-standing
call of the IUF.
Yet those hoping that the April meetings of the IMF and World Bank would
endorse coordination on an international level to counter the impact of the
current financial, economic and food crisis were disappointed. Similar to
the ITUC, which appealed for a "coordinated policy response" to a possible
implosion of the financial sector, the G24 group of developing countries
called for "active policy coordination" to mitigate the effects of a crisis
that, though originating in advanced economies, is expected to have
significant impact on poverty and food security in the developing world. But
the IMF's communiqué last month refused to endorse such coordination and
only called on member countries to be "coherent" in their individual
actions.
"Workers and the urban poor in developing countries are the most directly
affected by the high food prices and there could be no clearer manifestation
of the failures of the current system than the inability of the world to
feed its people. We call on world leaders to take immediate action to help
those people and at the same time to prepare truly coherent long-term
fundamental reform to respond effectively to the multiple crises that the
global community faces at this time," Ryder said.
The ITUC represents 168 million workers in 155
countries and territories and has 311 national affiliates.