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Inequality
Amid mounting food crisis, governments fear revolution of
the hungry
By Bill Van Auken
15 April 2008
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Last weeks meetings in Washington of the International
Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Group of Seven were convened
in the shadow of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression
of the 1930s. While Wall Streets turmoil and the deepening
credit crunch dominated discussions, leaders of the global financial
institutions were forced to take note of the growing global food
emergency, warning of the threat of widespread hunger and already
emerging political instability.
The seven major capitalist powers in the G-7the US, Japan,
Germany, Britain, France, Italy and Canadamade virtually
no mention of the global food crisis, referring in only one brief
reference to the risk of high oil and commodity prices.
Instead, they focused on the stability of the financial markets,
promising measures to shore up investor confidence.
The IMF and World Bank, however, felt compelled to acknowledge
the emerging worldwide catastrophe, in part because while these
agencies are instruments of the main imperialist powers, they
must posture as responsive to the needs of all countries. It would
be too revealing for them to focus exclusively on the fate of
major finance houses, while ignoring the fact that hundreds of
millions across the planet are being threatened with starvation.
More decisive, however, is the realization that this crisis
confronting the most impoverished countries and poorest sections
of the worlds population is threatening to unleash a revolution
of the hungry that could topple governments across large parts
of the world.
Even as the IMF and World Bank were meeting, the government
of Haiti was forced out in a no-confidence vote passed in response
to several days of demonstrations and protests against rising
food prices and hunger that swept all the countrys major
cities. Clashes between protesters and United Nations occupation
troops left at least five people dead and scores wounded and saw
crowds attempt to storm the presidential palace.
Food prices in Haiti had risen on average by 40 percent in
less than a year, with the cost of staples such as rice doubling.
The same essential story has been repeated in country after
country, from Africa to the Middle East, south Asia and Latin
America.
* In Bangladesh, on Saturday, some 20,000 textile workers took
to the streets to denounce soaring food prices and demand higher
wages. The price of rice in the country has doubled over the past
year, threatening the workers, who earn a monthly salary of just
$25, with hunger. Scores were injured in clashes with police,
who used gunfire in an attempt to disperse the crowds.
* In Egypt, protests by workers over food prices rocked the
textile center of Mahalla al-Kobra, north of Cairo, for two days
last week, with two people shot dead by security forces. Hundreds
were arrested, and the government sent plainclothes police into
the factories to force workers to work. Food prices in Egypt have
risen by 40 percent in the past year.
* Unions and shopkeepers staged a two-day general strike in
the West African nation of Burkina Faso last week to protest high
prices. The strikers demanded a significant and effective
cut in the price of rice and other staples.
* Several hundred demonstrators marched on parliament in Phnom
Penh, Cambodia April 6 to protest food price hikes. The cost of
a kilogram of rice has risen to $1 in a country where the average
income is barely 50 cents a day. Police armed with cattle prods
broke up the protest.
* Earlier this month, in the Ivory Coast, thousands marched
on the home of President Laurent Gbagbo, chanting we are
hungry and life is too expensive, you are going to
kill us. The country has seen food prices soar by between
30 percent and 60 percent from one week to the next. Police broke
up the protest with tear gas and batons, injuring over a dozen
people.
Similar demonstrations, strikes and clashes have taken place
in Bolivia, Peru, Mexico, Indonesia, the Philippines, Pakistan,
Uzbekistan, Thailand, Yemen, Ethiopia, and throughout most of
sub-Saharan Africa.
With terrifying rapidity, hundreds of millions of people all
over the planet have been confronted with the inability to obtain
the basic necessities of life. The global capitalist market is
dictating intolerable conditions for masses of people on every
continent, provoking a worldwide eruption of class struggle.
It is the concern that this struggle will spin out of control
that found expression in the statements of concern issued by the
IMF and World Bank leaders together with finance ministers and
central bank chiefs gathered in Washington.
If food prices go on as they are today, then the consequences
on the population in a large set of countries, including Africa,
but not only Africa, will be terrible. Hundreds of thousands of
people will be starving. Children will suffer from malnutrition,
with consequences all of their lives, Dominique Strauss-Kahn,
the International Monetary Fund managing director, told an April
12 press conference in Washington.
He warned that governments will see what they have done
totally destroyed and their legitimacy facing the population destroyed
also. Strauss-Kahn added: So its not only a
humanitarian question. It is not only an economic question. It
is also a democratic question. Those kind of questions sometimes
end into war.
In just two months, World Bank President Robert
Zoellick said in an opening speech to the meeting of finance ministers,
rice prices have skyrocketed to near historical levels,
rising by around 75 percent globally and more in some markets,
with more likely to come.
In Bangladesh, a 2-kilogram bag of rice, he said,
holding up such a bag, now consumes about half of the daily
income of a poor family.
He added that wheat prices had increased by 120 percent, more
than doubling the cost of a loaf of bread.
If food prices go on as they are today, then the consequences
on the population in a large set of countries ... will be terrible,
said Zoellick.
The international community will also need to take urgent
and concerted action in order to avoid the larger political and
security implications of this growing crisis, United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told international finance and trade
officials at a UN meeting following the weekend talks in Washington.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food
Jean Ziegler offered among the bleakest prognoses for the continuing
crisis. We are heading for a very long period of rioting,
conflicts (and) waves of uncontrollable regional instability marked
by the despair of the most vulnerable populations, he told
the French daily Liberation Monday.
He pointed out that, even before the present crisis, hunger
claimed the life of a child under the age of 10 every 5 seconds,
and 854 million people in the world were seriously undernourished.
What was now posed, Ziegler warned, is an imminent massacre.
While finance ministers from the US and Europe indicated agreement
that the crisis was severe, there was no indication that the major
capitalist powers have any plan to mount the kind of effort needed
to stave off a humanitarian catastrophe.
The White House announced Monday that it is releasing $200
million in emergency food aid in response to a World Bank appeal
for funding to make up for the shortfall in food assistance caused
by soaring prices. The amountroughly what the US spends
in half a day on its war to conquer Iraqis less than a drop
in the bucket in the face of the looming global catastrophe.
In the end, the crisis is a product of the capitalist market
itself. It is not a matter of too many mouths to feed or too little
food to supply human needs. Food is available, but the market
has driven prices to a level out of reach for a growing portion
of humanity in the most oppressed countries, and at the same effectively
slashing the living standards of workers in the more advanced
capitalist world.
This process is driven by a number of factors, including climatic
ones, such as the impact of a drought in Australia on wheat production
and a flood in Bangladesh on rice. There is also the rise in demand,
particularly from growing middle class layers in India and China.
But more fundamental is the effect of speculation in food as
a commoditylike oil and precious metals. It has become a
haven for financial investors fleeing from paper assets tainted
by subprime mortgages and other toxic credit products. The influx
of buyers drives prices and makes food unaffordable for the worlds
poor.
Fund money flowing into agriculture has boosted prices,
Standard Chartered Bank food commodities analyst Abah Ofon told
the media. Its fashionable. This is the year of agricultural
commodities.
Speculation in food as a commodity has been sharply accelerated
by the decline in the value of the dollar, soaring oil prices
and the promotion of biofuel production in the US and elsewhere.
This attempt to generate a new investment bubble,
based on the fraud that somehow turning corn into ethanol represents
a green alternative to fossil fuels, has driven up
the price not only of corn, but other grains, while diverting
a major share of food production into a more profitable venture.
Subsidized by the US government, American farmers have diverted
fully 30 percent of corn production into the ethanol scheme, driving
up the cost of other, more expensive, grains that are being bought
as substitutes for animal feed.
When a biofuel policy is launched in the United States,
thanks to subsidies of $6 billion, of bio-fuels that drains 138
million tons of corn from the market, the foundation is laid for
a crime against humanity to satisfy ones own thirst for
fuel, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Jean
Ziegler told Liberation.
This assessment was repeated by Indias finance minister,
Palaniappan Chidambaram, who declared, When millions of
people are going hungry, its a crime against humanity that
food should be diverted to biofuels.
US officials dismissed the charges, insisting that biofuel
production was only one factor among many and indicating that
there is no plan to change Washingtons policy.
Country after country has been left vulnerable to the global
commodity price surge by free market policies implemented
at the demands of Washington and the international financial agencies
such as the IMF and World Bank over the past quarter century.
The closer integration of the economies of the oppressed countries
into the world market has been accompanied by their increasing
concentration on specialized export crops, while tariff barriers
have been demolished, opening the way to subsidized agricultural
staples from the more advanced countries capturing local markets.
Now, attempts by individual national governments to remedy
the problem within their own bordersoften taking the form
of commodity producers erecting barriers on exportshave
served to exacerbate the crisis internationally, driving food
prices even higher, while triggering protests by farmers in countries
stretching from India to Argentina. According to a recent World
Bank survey, at least 58 countries have implemented at least some
form of food-trade protectionism.
What is emerging in the crisis over food prices is a tumultuous
manifestation of a breakdown of the global capitalist order. The
catastrophe facing billions of people around the globe cannot
be resolved within the confines of a system based on private profit
and the nation state.
The revolutionary implications of this crisis are beginning
to dawn on elements within the ruling establishment itself. In
an article published Monday, the influential US magazine Time
noted: The idea of the starving masses driven by their desperation
to take to the streets and overthrow the ancien regime has seemed
impossibly quaint since capitalism triumphed so decisively in
the Cold War... And yet, the headlines of the past month suggest
that skyrocketing food prices are threatening the stability of
a growing number of governments around the world.
See Also:
India: Rising food prices threaten social
calamity
[12 April 2008]
IMF cuts US growth forecast, warns of
global slump
[12 April 2008]
Egypt: Mass protests over price hikes
[11 April 2008]
Anger grows over rising prices in Sri
Lanka
[11 April 2008]
Rice shortages heighten political crisis
in the Philippines
[8 April 2008]
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