myths of hunger

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myths of hunger

Postby Darth Rock&Roll on Sun Feb 21, 2010 12:21 pm

why we tell ourselves these lies I have no idea, but here's a fresh up.

http://www.foodfirst.org/en/node/1480

pasted here for convenience.

Updated by Holly Poole-Kavana based on the book World Hunger: Twelve Myths

Why so much hunger?

What can we do about it?

To answer these questions we must unlearn much of what we have been taught.
Only by freeing ourselves from the grip of ­widely held myths can we grasp the roots of hunger and see what we can do to end it.

Myth 1:

Not Enough Food to Go Around

Reality: Abundance, not scarcity, best describes the world's food supply. Enough wheat, rice and other grains are produced to provide every human being with 3,200 calories a day. That doesn't even count many other commonly eaten foods - ­vegetables, beans, nuts, root crops, fruits, grass-fed meats, and fish. Enough food is available to provide at least 4.3 pounds of food per person a day worldwide: two and half pounds of grain, beans and nuts, about a pound of fruits and vegetables, and nearly another pound of meat, milk and eggs - ­enough to make most people fat! The problem is that many people are too poor to buy readily available food. Even most "hungry countries" have enough food for all their people right now. Many are net exporters of food and other agricultural products.

Myth 2:

Nature is to Blame for Famine

Reality: It's too easy to blame nature. Human-made forces are making people increasingly vulnerable to nature's vagaries. Food is always available for those who can afford it - ­starvation during hard times hits only the poorest. Millions live on the brink of disaster in South Asia, Africa and elsewhere, because they are deprived of land by a powerful few, trapped in the unremitting grip of debt, or miserably paid. Natural events rarely explain deaths; they are simply the final push over the brink. Human institutions and policies determine who eats and who starves during hard times. Likewise, in America many homeless die from the cold every winter, yet ultimate responsibility doesn't lie with the weather. The real culprits are an economy that fails to offer everyone opportunities, and a society that places economic efficiency over compassion.

Myth 3

Too Many People

Reality: Birth rates are falling rapidly worldwide as remaining regions of the Third World begin the demographic transition - ­when birth rates drop in response to an earlier decline in death rates. Although rapid population growth remains a serious concern in many countries, nowhere does population density explain hunger. For every Bangladesh, a densely populated and hungry country, we find a Nigeria, Brazil or Bolivia, where abundant food resources coexist with hunger. Or we find a country like the Netherlands, where very little land per person has not prevented it from eliminating hunger and becoming a net exporter of food. Rapid population growth is not the root cause of hunger. Like hunger itself, it results from underlying inequities that deprive people, especially poor women, of economic opportunity and security. Rapid population growth and hunger are endemic to societies where land ownership, jobs, education, health care, and old age security are beyond the reach of most people. Those Third World societies with dramatically successful early and rapid reductions of population growth rates - ­China, Sri Lanka, Colombia, Cuba and the Indian state of Kerala - ­prove that the lives of the poor, especially poor women, must improve before they can choose to have fewer children.

Myth 4:

The Environment vs. More Food?

Reality: We should be alarmed that an environmental crisis is undercutting our food-production resources, but a trade-off between our environment and the world's need for food is not inevitable. Efforts to feed the hungry are not causing the environmental crisis. Large corporations are mainly responsible for deforestation - ­creating and profiting from developed-country consumer demand for tropical hardwoods and exotic or out-of-season food items. Most pesticides used in the Third World are applied to export crops, playing little role in feeding the hungry, while in the U.S. they are used to give a blemish-free cosmetic appearance to produce, with no improvement in nutritional value.

Alternatives exist now and many more are possible. The success of organic farmers in the U.S. gives a glimpse of the possibilities. Cuba's success in overcoming a food crisis through self-reliance and sustainable, virtually pesticide-free agriculture is another good example. Indeed, environmentally sound agricultural alternatives can be more productive than environmentally destructive ones.

Myth 5:

The Green Revolution is the Answer

Reality: The production advances of the Green Revolution are no myth. Thanks to the new seeds, millions of tons more grain a year are being harvested. But focusing narrowly on increasing production cannot alleviate hunger because it fails to alter the tightly concentrated distribution of economic power that determines who can buy the additional food. That's why in several of the biggest Green Revolution successes - ­India, Mexico, and the Philippines - ­grain production and in some cases, exports, have climbed, while hunger has persisted and the long-term productive capacity of the soil is degraded. Now we must fight the prospect of a ‘New Green Revolution' based on biotechnology, which threatens to further accentuate inequality.

Myth 6:

We Need Large Farms

Reality: Large landowners who control most of the best land often leave much of it idle. Unjust farming systems leave farmland in the hands of the most inefficient producers. By contrast, small farmers typically achieve at least four to five times greater output per acre, in part because they work their land more intensively and use integrated, and often more sustainable, production systems. Without secure tenure, the many millions of tenant farmers in the Third World have little incentive to invest in land improvements, to rotate crops, or to leave land fallow for the sake of long-term soil fertility. Future food production is undermined. On the other hand, redistribution of land can favor production. Historically comprehensive land reforms have markedly increased production in countries as diverse as Japan, Zimbabwe, and Taiwan. A World Bank study of northeast Brazil estimates that redistributing farmland into smaller holdings would raise output an astonishing 80 percent.

Myth 7:

The Free Market Can End Hunger

Reality: Unfortunately, such a "market-is-good, government-is-bad" formula can never help address the causes of hunger. Such a dogmatic stance misleads us that a society can opt for one or the other, when in fact every economy on earth combines the market and government in allocating resources and distributing goods. The market's marvelous efficiencies can only work to eliminate hunger, however, when purchasing power is widely dispersed.

So all those who believe in the usefulness of the market and the necessity of ending hunger must concentrate on promoting not the market, but the consumers! In this task, government has a vital role to play in countering the tendency toward economic concentration, through genuine tax, credit, and land reforms to disperse buying power toward the poor. Recent trends toward privatization and de-regulation are most definitely not the answer.

Myth 8:

Free Trade is the Answer

Reality: The trade promotion formula has proven an abject failure at alleviating hunger. In most Third World countries exports have boomed while hunger has continued unabated or actually worsened. While soybean exports boomed in Brazil - ­to feed Japanese and European livestock - ­hunger spread from one-third to two-thirds of the population. Where the majority of people have been made too poor to buy the food grown on their own country's soil, those who control productive resources will, not surprisingly, orient their production to more lucrative markets abroad. Export crop production squeezes out basic food production. So-called free trade treaties like NAFTA and WTO pit working people in different countries against each other in a ‘race to the bottom,' where the basis of competition is who will work for less, without adequate health coverage or minimum environmental standards. Mexico and the U.S. are a case in point: since NAFTA we have had a net loss of over a million jobs here in the U.S., while Mexico has lost 1.3 million in the agricultural sector alone and hunger is on the rise in both countries.

Myth 9:

Too Hungry to Fight for Their Rights

Reality: Bombarded with images of poor people as weak and hungry, we lose sight of the obvious: for those with few resources, mere survival requires tremendous effort. If the poor were truly passive, few of them could even survive. Around the world, from the Zapatistas in Chiapas, Mexico to the Landless People's Movement in South Africa, wherever people are suffering needlessly movements for change are underway. People will feed themselves, if allowed to do so. It's not our job to ‘set things right' for others. Our responsibility is to remove the obstacles in their paths, obstacles often created by large corporations and U.S. government, World Bank and IMF policies.

Myth 10:

More U.S. Aid Will Help the Hungry

Reality: Most U.S. aid works directly against the hungry. Foreign aid can only reinforce, not change, the status quo. Where governments answer only to elites, our aid not only fails to reach hungry people, it shores up the very forces working against them. Our aid is used to impose free trade and free market policies, to promote exports at the expense of food production, and to provide the arms that repressive governments use to stay in power. Even emergency, or humanitarian aid, which makes up only eight percent of the total, often ends up enriching American grain companies while failing to reach the hungry, and it can dangerously undercut local food production in the recipient country. It would be better to use our foreign aid budget for unconditional debt relief, as it is the foreign debt burden that forces most Third World countries to cut back on basic health, education and anti-poverty programs.

Myth 11:

We Benefit From Their Poverty

Reality: The biggest threat to the well-being of the vast majority of Americans is not the advancement but the continued deprivation of the hungry. Low wages - ­both abroad and in inner cities at home - ­may mean cheaper bananas, shirts, computers and fast food for most Americans, but in other ways we pay heavily for hunger and poverty. Enforced poverty in the Third World jeopardizes U.S. jobs, wages and working conditions as corporations seek cheaper labor abroad. In a global economy, what American workers have achieved in employment, wage levels, and working conditions can be protected only when working people in every country are freed from economic desperation.

Here at home, policies like welfare reform throw more people into the job market than can be absorbed - ­at below minimum wage levels in the case of ‘workfare'­ - which puts downward pressure on the wages of those on higher rungs of the employment ladder. The growing numbers of ‘working poor' are those who have part- or full-time low wage jobs yet cannot afford adequate nutrition or housing for their families. Educating ourselves about the common interests most Americans share with the poor in the Third World and at home allows us to be compassionate without sliding into pity. In working to clear the way for the poor to free themselves from economic oppression, we free ourselves as well.

Myth 12:

Curtail Freedom to End Hunger?

Reality: There is no theoretical or practical reason why freedom, taken to mean civil liberties, should be incompatible with ending hunger. Surveying the globe, we see no correlation between hunger and civil liberties. However, one narrow definition of freedom - ­the right to unlimited accumulation of wealth-producing property and the right to use that property however one sees fit - ­is in fundamental conflict with ending hunger. By contrast, a definition of freedom more consistent with our nation's dominant founding vision holds that economic security for all is the guarantor of our liberty. Such an understanding of freedom is essential to ending hunger.

Selected References:
Note: for a full list of references see Lappe, Frances Moore, Joseph Collins, and Peter Rosset. 1998. World Hunger: Twelve Myths. New York: Grove Press.

Myth 1:
1.Data calculated from FAOSTAT. 2005. Rome: United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
2.Handbook of International Trade and Development Statistics. 1995. New York and Geneva: United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Tables 7 and 8.

Myth 2:
1.Sen, Amartya. 1981. Poverty and Famines. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
2.Timberlake, L. and A. Wijkman. 1984. Natural Disasters: Acts of God or Acts of Man? London and Washington, DC: Earthscan.
3.Messer, Ellen. 1996. Hunger as a Weapon of War in 1994. Pp. 19-48 in The Hunger Report: 1995, ed. Ellen Messer and Peter Uvin. Amsterdam: Gordon and Breach Science Publishers.

Myth 3:
1.Merrick, Thomas. 1994. Population Dynamics in Developing Countries. pp. 79-105 in Population and Development: Old Debates, New Conclusions, ed. Robert Cassen. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
2.Bread for the World Institute. 1996. Hunger, 1997: What Governments Can Do. Silver Spring, MD.
3.World Bank. 1994. Human Development Report.

Myth 4:
1.Vandermeer, John and Ivette Perfecto. 2005. Breakfast of Biodiversity: The Truth about Rainforest Destruction. Oakland: Food First Books.
2.Nicholls, Clara Ines and Miguel Altieri. 1997. Conventional Agriculture Development Models and the Persistence of the Pesticide Treadmill in Latin America. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology 4:93-111.

Myth 5:
1.Shiva, Vandana. 1991. The Violence of the Green Revolution: Third World Agriculture, Ecology, and Politics. Penang, Malaysia: Third World Network.
2.Pearse, Andrew. 1980. Seeds of Plenty, Seeds of Want: Social and Economic Implications of the Green Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press.

Myth 6:
1.Sobhan, Rehman. 1993. Agrarian Reform and Social Transformation. London: Zed.
2.Thiesenhusen, William C. 1995. Broken Promises: Agrarian Reform and the Latin American Campesino. Boulder: Westview Press.
3.Griffin, K., A.R. Khan, and A. Ickowitz. 2002. Poverty and the distribution of land. Journal of Agrarian Change 2(3):279-330.

Myth 7:
1.Collins, Joseph and John Lear. 1995. Chile’s Free Market Miracle: A Second Look. Oakland: Food First Books.
2.Bello, Walden. 1994. Dark Victory: The United States, Structural Adjustment and Global Poverty. London: Pluto Press, Food First Books, and Transnational Institute.

Myth 8:
1.(World agricultural commodity export data) FAOSTAT data. 2005. Rome: Untied Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
2.Goldsmith, Edward and Jerry Mander, eds. 1996. The Case Against the Global Economy and a Turn Toward the Local. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.

Myth 9:
1.Wright, Angus and Wendy Wolford. 2003. To Inherit the Earth: The Landless Movement and the Struggle for a New Brazil. Oakland: Food First Books.
2.Collier, George. 2005. Basta! Land an dhte Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas. Oakland: Food First Books.

Myth 10:
1.OEDC. 2003-4. Total DAC Aid at a Glance. www.oecd.org/dataoecd/17/39/23664717.gif
2.Lappe, F.M., R. Schurman, and K. Danaher. 1987. Betraying the National Interest: How U.S. Foreign Aid Threatens Global Security by Undermining the Political and Economic Stability of the Third World. New York: Grove Press.

Myth 11:
1.Sklar, Holly. 1995. Chaos or Community? Seeking Solutions, Not Scapegoats. Boston: South End Press.
2.Untied States Conference of Mayors. 2002. A Status Report on Hunger and Homelessness in America’s Cities: A 25-City Survey, December 2002. Washington DC: United States Conference of Mayors.
3.Bonanno, A., L. Busch, W. Friedland, L. Gouveia, and E. Mingione, eds. 1997. Food Security and Agricultural Trade under NAFTA. Minneapolis: Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy.

Myth 12:
1.Shue, Henry. 1980. Basic Rights: Subsistence, Affluence, and U.S. Foreign Policy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Institute for Food and Development Policy Backgrounder
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Brady on Sun Feb 21, 2010 12:34 pm

Very interesting read, and forces me to think about a couple of those (re: American aid and Fair Trade) that I usually am all for.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Peacedog on Sun Feb 21, 2010 6:45 pm

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Re: myths of hunger

Postby zenshiite on Sun Feb 21, 2010 7:09 pm

^Um, you do realize that the cost of food has been going up steadily? Moreover, staple foods in certain regions have been skyrocketing specifically because of agri-business. Corn in Mexico, for instance.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby PartridgeRun on Sun Feb 21, 2010 7:19 pm

Yeah, and if we all became vegetarians Earth could support 9 billion people too...
Let's say we simultaneously began implementing permaculture techniques all over the world. Let's also say we find some way of overcoming unequalities in income/resource distribution and that we magically discover the one global, political system which would and could guarantee effective storing and equal distribution of all that plentiful food.
What would happen then?
Would global population peak at 9 billion in 2050, because everybody had access to modern wonders like computers, flatscreens and motoring fun?
What would happen to the forests, mountains, stream and soil???

Bullshit I say - pure unadulterated bullshit.

You would have to put an end to poverty, female illiteracy, tyranny and civil conflict, and you would have to do it globally...

Might as well say the problem is that we have such a thing as society.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Andy_S on Mon Feb 22, 2010 12:57 am

The only hungry nation I am familiar with is North Korea. In that sense, some of what is said is true - especially graf 3. However, NK also obviates the idea (that seems implicit in much of the above) that hunger is somehow the western and/or developed world that is at fault - as does the point that Peacedog makes re Zimbabwe.

Still, some thought provoking stuff there, and the issue of FTAs pitting the lowest and poorest, nation to nation, against each other, has merit. Personally, I also like the point made in Graf 12, but I think many, many Americans would dispute that opinion.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Teazer on Mon Feb 22, 2010 3:45 am

A few notes that came to mind...
One problem with the piece is that it conflates starvation in 3rd world countries with those of homeless and poor people in the US. The problem with the latter is not due to inequitable distribution of food - it's that for some reason or another they are not able to access the welfare systems that exist. Getting cheap food to avoid starvation in the US is really not a problem - just look at obesity rates amongst poor people. There are also orders of magnitude of difference between that and the 3rd world situations.

If we ignore US internal issues and just look at the 3rd world - the biggest problems are usually due to either war or political unrest. The consequences are...
- any time you grow stuff it gets stolen.
- Any investment in better technology or infrastructure gets stolen or wrecked.
- Mass exodus leading to concentrations of people in areas that can't support them.

The article mentions other governmental issues some of which are relevant, but IMO these are the biggest ones. Some of the conclusions the article draws are very short sighted.

1. "The problem is that many people are too poor to buy readily available food. Even most "hungry countries" have enough food for all their people right now. Many are net exporters of food and other agricultural products."
There are probably more than a few governance problems in many of these cases. Some common examples are when the government wants to stay in power so needs to buy lots of weapons. To do this it needs exports so they force the locals to farm that instead of their normal subsistence foods. The answer is better government and not selling them guns rather than any kind of forced distribution of food.

2. " ultimate responsibility doesn't lie with the weather. The real culprits are an economy that fails to offer everyone opportunities, and a society that places economic efficiency over compassion."

What first came to mind was:
<<"And then, one Thursday, nearly two thousand years after one man had been nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people for a change, a girl sitting on her own in a small café in Rickmansworth suddenly realized what it was that had been going wrong all this time, and she finally knew how the world could be made a good and happy place. This time it was right, it would work, and no one would have to get nailed to anything.

Sadly, however, before she could get to a phone to tell anyone about it, the Earth was destroyed, and the idea was lost forever.>>

Practically speaking though, there are some pretty strong psychological, sociological and economical forces pushing people to make decisions for strangers based on a pretty self-interested set of principals. Hoping for compassion is not going to get us very far.

3. As the article says, high birth rates is a problem. One reason being that in countries where there is no welfare system, your best bet for elderly life is having a lot of children. However population growth in such cases does not directly cause starvation. It does make that region much more susceptible to short term fluctuations in weather, distribution problems, bad government, poor farming practices etc. The fix would be make life more stable by reducing eg the wars and government instability/ lack of laws etc that is causing it.

7. "The market's marvelous efficiencies can only work to eliminate hunger, however, when purchasing power is widely dispersed."
Actually that has some truth to it. However their conclusion to just redistribute wealth is flawed since you'd never get the wealthy in those countries to agree. To some extent globalization has increased standards of living in some countries. The problem is that much of the workforce in countries with starvation lack a lot of the needed skills for successful export goods beyond the previously mentioned cash crops that stop them growing subsistence foods. Maybe focussing on subsidising education for a long term solution and microfinance loans in the short term.

8. See 7

10. There are times for aid. Some of these issues are due to short term problems. eg feeding people in Haiti, sudden unexpected droughts etc. Sure there are long term problems there, but starvation wasn't really one of them. In cases like that, dumping large amounts of food aid works fine. Debt relief can make sense to some degree, but what's to stop the country just piling up new debts spending money in dubious ways? Using aid money to buy local food from there or from nearby countries is cheaper than shipping it from the US, but less likely to be backed by government due to the vested interests.

11. We certainly don't benefit from 3rd world countries' starvation. Poverty, maybe. Depends on whose, where, and what they can produce.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Bär on Mon Feb 22, 2010 8:17 am

I just need to sneak in a "Fuck Monsanto" dig here.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Michael on Mon Feb 22, 2010 8:59 am

Thanks for that. Glad I'm not the only one. And Archer Daniels Midland, too. Thanks guys, for your awesome management of the land, which depleted 90% of the nutrients from the soil. Thanks for the diseases and sterility from GMO. Thanks for shipping everything all over to create a false market system where nothing is fresh or unadulterated and everything is artificially expensive and under corporate control. Thanks a whole heckuva lot.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby David Boxen on Mon Feb 22, 2010 5:02 pm

I just finished reading End Of Food: How the Food Industry Is Destroying Our Food Supply - and What You Can Do About It

Anyone else read this?
We are not stuff that abides, but patterns that perpetuate themselves. - Norbert Wiener
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby XinKuzi on Mon Feb 22, 2010 6:01 pm

Brady wrote:Very interesting read, and forces me to think about a couple of those (re: American aid and Fair Trade) that I usually am all for.


Fair trade and Free Trade (NAFTA) are not the same thing.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Steve James on Mon Feb 22, 2010 6:32 pm

Hmm, when you guys start talking about "big farm", you really sound like communists. Really, there's no more communal/social form of food production than the small local farm or cooperative. Otoh, then you have to put up with limited variation and availability. The advantage of "big farm" is consistency of a wide variety of products at a lower cost to the consumer. Ya'll are abso-f-inlutely right about what happens to the soil --and the product. But, unfortunately, the cost of real chicken eggs or vegetables grown without synthetic fertilizers, pesticides and hormones is 3x higher. Even if we throw in the relatively low cost of refrigerated transportation, the big farms can underbid and out produce the old mom and pop operations. Nowadays, it's even getting harder for words like "organic" or "free range" or "natural" to have any meaning. Because of genetic engineering --a science becoming more and more linked to agro-business. That's kind of scary, really scary.

Anyway, I guess it's also important to separate hunger from starvation.
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Michael on Mon Feb 22, 2010 7:27 pm

David Boxen wrote:I just finished reading End Of Food: How the Food Industry Is Destroying Our Food Supply - and What You Can Do About It

Anyone else read this?

Are there any chicks in it?
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby David Boxen on Mon Feb 22, 2010 7:34 pm

I do remember some mention of chicks
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Re: myths of hunger

Postby Michael on Mon Feb 22, 2010 7:46 pm

;D
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