This piece is part of a series of blogs by leading NGOs to call attention to a range of issues that should be raised at the G8 summit at Camp David in rural Maryland from May 18-19.
In just over a week, President Obama will host G8 leaders at Camp David. In addition to the usual global security and financial issues, they'll talk about a crisis that affects more than a billion people on the planet: global hunger.
And it's a good thing they've put hunger on their agenda. In the past year, we've seen a famine in the Horn of Africa, and now 13.4 million people in the Sahel region of West Africa are facing hunger. In the Gambia alone, spiraling food prices mean an estimated 700,000 people are going hungry. Food prices are back on the rise across the globe. G8 action to fight global hunger couldn't be more urgent and timely.
Three years ago at the G8 summit in Italy, when faced with a similar global food crisis, President Obama led the G8 to launch the L'Aquila Food Security Initiative (AFSI), which committed donors to invest $22 billion over three years to support country-owned agricultural development plans. They also promised to focus that support on helping women smallholder farmers -- who are key to ending hunger -- to become more productive. But the L'Aquila G8 hunger pledge expires next month.
With such urgent global needs and an expiring pledge, the conditions are ripe for the Camp David G8 to be something historic. It could be remembered as a moment when world leaders finally took the bold steps needed to partner with developing nations to place the world on an irrevocable trajectory towards a hunger-free world.
Or, it could be remembered as just another summit filled with warm words and conventional wisdom that failed to deliver the change we need.
President Obama deserves credit for making food security the signature development issue of his administration. The Obama administration has spearheaded the Feed the Future program, led efforts to launch and sustain the innovative Global Agriculture Food Security Program (GAFSP), and made the case to Congress for important increases in aid to support smallholder farmers in Africa.
There is no lack of motivation to address global hunger at this summit, but it is how they are going about it that is causing concern. The Obama administration is working on a plan that focuses on providing incentives to get the private sector more involved in food production in poor countries. The private sector - especially small businesses in Africa -- is key to agricultural development. But it's also clear that the administration's private sector focus is more about leaders' fear of asking for new aid to agriculture in a tough political and fiscal climate than about what's most urgently needed to achieve a hunger-free world.
And to be blunt, what we've seen of the administration's private sector approach looks like it could be more of the same approach that hasn't worked. It's about creating "enabling environments" to entice the private sector to invest in African agricultural development -- changing trade policies, opening up markets for seeds and technology, changing regulations on land tenure. More fundamentally, the administration's proposal relies on a flawed assumption that increased private sector engagement will in turn lead to increased economic growth, which will in turn increase incomes and food security. But this isn't automatically the case -- investments have to be carefully planned and inclusively implemented if they are to reach the poorest of the poor, improve nutrition and reach smallholders. This is not an historic strong suit of the private sector.
So if these are the problems, what can be done to ensure Camp David is remembered as an historic summit in the fight against hunger?
The pessimist in me worries Camp David will be more of the same -- another summit in a long line of them. The optimist in me is hopeful that President Obama and other G8 leaders will rise to the occasion and do what it takes to make this G8 one that set the world on an irrevocable path to zero hunger. Let's hope the optimist is right.
Read more G8 news and blogs on HuffPost's G8 big news page.
Mahamadou Issoufou: The G8 Must Keep Its End of the Deal
Ben Leo: Honoring the Commitment to Put an End to Food Insecurity
Samuel A. Worthington: Put Nutrition and Hunger on G8 Table at Camp David
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Even if something was accomplished, it could be done through a much cheaper and more efficient means.
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