The Right to Food Means Freedom from Dogma

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Today more than 150 countries will celebrate World Food Day, whose theme this year is the right to food. The right to food may sound innocuous enough, but it's a direct affront to the reigning market fundamentalism both guiding and obfuscating U.S. food, farming, and international aid policies.

While we in the United States are still largely locked into this failing paradigm -- the market as sacred arbiter of economic outcomes -- people elsewhere are beginning to make the right to food real, more than fifty years after it was first codified in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

From Malawi's now-flourishing maize farmers to Brazil's successful new farm communities, millions are shedding primitive marketism; they see both government and the market as tools through which to realize basic human values. They've experienced the fallacy that an "unfettered" market -- what Ronald Reagan called "the magic of the market" -- will meet their basic human needs.

No degree in economics is necessary to grasp problem number one of market fundamentalism as it relates to food: The market responds to money, not to hunger.

That simple truth explains what otherwise is of course mind-boggling: Though the planet produces enough calories to make every one of us chubby, 854 million are hungry, up from 830 million six years ago according to the United Nations. Here at home where 13,000 calories a day are produced in grain alone for each of us, market dogma leaves millions hungry: 36 million Americans are food insecure -- that's more than the entire population of Canada.

In India a few years ago, we passed football-field sized hillocks of surplus grain stored along the roads. When we queried the head of India's food distribution in New Delhi about his plans for it, he told us the government was checking out export options. "And why not make it available to the hungry, since almost half of India's children are underfed?" we asked. He looked at us as if we had suggested he donate the Parliament building to the homeless.

And, because the poor can't exert "market demand," 70 percent of the world's agricultural land is devoted to grazing and crops that become feed for factory-farmed animals -- all to produce meat priced beyond the affordability of the poor and hungry.

Market fundamentalism also blinds many to its second pitfall: Left to its own devices -- without a democratic polity enforcing rules to keep it competitive -- the market inexorably concentrates control, killing the competitive discipline that was the rationale to begin with. Economists generally agree that once four companies control 40 percent or more of a market, real competition -- what consumers and farmers rely on for fair prices and practices -- is shot.

Consider that today the four largest beef processors control 81 percent of the market or that the four largest grain processors control 80 percent of the soybean market. One company -- Monsanto -- controls more than 90 percent of the market for genetically modified seeds and Wal-Mart collects an estimated one in four food dollars spent in the United States.

But across the planet people are holding government accountable for using the market as a tool of shared human values, including the virtually universal agreement that food is a human right, now enshrined in the constitutions of twenty-two nations.

Earlier this year in Mali a historic summit on food as a human right brought together people from eighty-four countries. The delegates included consumer advocates and trade union representatives and food producers, from Indonesian shrimpers to Lebanese pastoralists and Midwestern organic farmers, all sharing strategies for bringing food as a human right to reality.

In the sub-Saharan African country of Malawi, ranked last of 194 countries by GDP per capita, the government rejected the market-magic mentality and resumed subsidizing its small farmers, offering seeds and fertilizer below market price. In a few years the country went from desperate World Food Program recipient to a maize exporter, earning enough to pay for the subsidies -- twice over. Malawi even became a WFP donor, giving 400,000 tons of maize to the program this year, according to a recent article in Canada's Globe and Mail . Of course, this one market correction doesn't end hunger in a struggling nation, but shedding a crippling dogma is a start.

Beginning in the 1980s in Brazil, the Landless Workers Movement, or MST as it is known from its acronym in Portuguese, used the right granted in the Brazilian constitution to claim unused land for productive purposes. In a country where less than two percent of the population controls roughly half the land leaving much of it idle, the landless stood up to market dictum, reclaiming millions of acres, and have been reducing hunger ever since. Now, with roughly a third of a million families on almost 20 million acres of formerly idle land, the MST is making a dent in Brazil's hunger crisis, as infant mortality has fallen in its new communities.

Helping to guide the country's national Zero Hunger campaign has been the hunger-fighting experience of Brazil's third largest city, Belo Horizonte. Declaring healthy food a right of citizenship in 1993, city officials drew together voices from labor, church, and citizen organizations. Its solution was not to do away with the market; it was to correct "market failures," as an economist would say.

The local government is making sure the market works for everyone, including the poorest. Their out-of-the-box innovations, coordinated by a new municipal office of food security, range from fair-price produce stands supplied by local farmers to open-air restaurants serving 12,000 subsidized meals daily to city-sponsored radio broadcasts leading shoppers to the least expensive essentials. As a result, the city's infant death rate, a widely accepted measure of hunger, fell a striking 56 percent over the first decade of these efforts. It cost one percent of the city's budget.

Sadly, here at home market dogma is so deeply entrenched that most of don't even notice when our government, beholden to the biggest players in the food industry, intervenes in the market -- not in the public's interest but on behalf of concentrated wealth: for example, the billions in farm commodity subsidies inked into the Farm Bill.

Around the world, millions are shedding the shackles of market fundamentalism to embrace real hunger-fighting solutions. While celebrating World Food Day, Americans would do well to remove the influence of corporations in our democracy and to learn from those busting the myth of the market's magic and so that food might become a human right here, in the world's richest agricultural land.

www.smallplanetinstitute.org

 
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" The market responds to money not hunger ." Very insghtful analiysis on the ppart of the Lappes.Corporations and the market are exacerbating the problem of hunger globally as opposed to ameliorating persistent poverty and hunger.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:18 PM on 10/16/2007

Interesting that in California whose leading product is agricultural products in the US also has some of the poorest (and probably hungriest) communities located in the same places (counties) where that agricultural bounty is produced.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 10/16/2007

A great article- ironic that I read it just after donating to a great food program called "Blessings in Backpacks" where underprivaledged children are sent home from school on Fridays with 6 meals to carry them through the weekend. Test scores are up, and Monday mornings are turned around because the children's every thought is not on how hungry they are.
Back to your article_ Monsanto has been particularily harmful to developing countries because their "modified" seeds do not produce plants whose seed will germinate- thus forcing people to purchase seed yearly (at high costs considering how low yearly incomes are in these countries). Farmers always before held back seed from market to use for their next year's crop.
I am glad this Right to Food concept is growing!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 10/16/2007

Thank you for everything you do!!!!
Our corporate driven consumerism has to be challenged before America can begin to address this issue.The sad truth is those under the age of thirty-five do not have a clue how to shop.They are subjected to a non-stop barrage of buy me-buy me-buy me.This mass marketing has taken the place of traditions past from one generation to the next.
In the Global Warming era now upon us--World Hunger will become a household topic--because it will be affecting the middle classes of the world not only the poor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 AM on 10/16/2007

I'm all for the right to food, but I think you've got to address population issues if you want to move beyond political rhetoric. Do all six billion of us have the right to never go hungry? When there are 12 billion of us will the right still be valid?

The world is being changed by the way we produce and harvest food. The oceans are dying from massive trawling operations. Agricultural irrigation is changing the climate and water tables. Yes, we need to use land more efficiently and fairly, but ignoring the limits of reasonable human population isn't going to help anyone realize that goal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 10/16/2007

Thanks to both Frances and Anna for drawing attention to the fallacies and foibles of our current food system. It sounds like a bad science fiction movie, but the scary truth is that corporations are systematically seizing control of the world's food supply, and alleviating hunger is not their priority. There's enough food to feed the world, if enough of us want to make it happen. Cheers to you for leading the way--

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 10/16/2007

Frances Moore Lappe is one of the world's great, yet often unsung, heroes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 AM on 10/16/2007
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Yes, she is a heroine of mine to be sure! "Diet for a Small Planet" was published when I was a child and it wasn't until college that I discovered this miraculous book -- when I chose to be a complete vegetarian. My choice freed me from many things and after all these years I am still happy that I eat with a conscience.

However, there's a lot to fix as the Lappes stated. That "36 million Americans are food insecure -- that's more than the entire population of Canada" is a current statistic, should cause every American concern. Why are people STILL going hungry in what's considered the richest (agriculturally) country in the world??

One small step I have taken is to teach my children about the origins of their meals, growing some of our food, cooking from scratch, eating in season and under- or unprocessed foods and ORGANIC whenever possible. We've been "locavores" for many years (I've followed this way of eating for most of my life, having had the wealth of California's produce at hand and knowing how fortunate I've been to grow up here!).

I would like to mention an author who recently wrote a book about her family's challenges in living a year off the land and buying local only: her name is Barbara Kingsolver. Read "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle" for another view of this global issue and some practical applications. She is a naturalist with a wonderful talent for writing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 10/16/2007
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