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Ghanaian: G8 Food Aid Might "Do More Harm Than Good"

by: Jill Richardson

Fri Jul 10, 2009 at 07:30:23 AM PDT


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Today's episode of Democracy Now! featured 2 Ghanaians commenting on Obama's trip to their country. When asked about the G8's recent promise of food aid, the two Ghanaians were far from joyous. Their reaction was actually quite skeptical. One said that "the devil is in the details" because often the U.S. & other developed countries' end up screwing over Africa by dumping cheap sudsidized commodities on them in the form of food aid and undercutting their own farmers. He added that we need to look closely at what is being promised because often these big announcements involve repackaging old money and calling it new money in order to promise a large dollar value in aid. All in all, he said, the promised aid may "do more harm than good."

On that note, Food and Water Watch just put out a press release that was critical of the Obama Administration's efforts to combat global hunger and poverty. They say Obama's policy "merely dusts off the tired, failed approaches of the Bush years," referencing free trade and reliance on biotechnology as policies that do not work. I've pasted it below in its entirety so you can take a look.

Jill Richardson :: Ghanaian: G8 Food Aid Might "Do More Harm Than Good"
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

July 10, 2009

Food & Water Watch Disputes Obama Administration's Reliance on Trade, Biotechnology to Combat Global Hunger and Poverty
Statement of Food & Water Watch Executive Director Wenonah Hauter

WASHINGTON, D.C.  - "Today, the Obama administration announced a new approach to combating global hunger and poverty that merely dusts off the tired, failed approaches of the Bush years - more free trade and the adoption of biotechnology (suggested by the "access to better seeds" language in the G8 Joint Statement on global food security). Renewed focus and funding for programs that energize rural communities around the world and alleviate hunger are desperately needed, but the plan announced today cannot achieve these goals. A bold, new approach is needed. More free trade and biotechnology are not new ideas -- they are the darling twins of the agribusiness industry.

"The 2008 food crisis demonstrated categorically that free trade in agricultural commodities was no substitute to genuine food security and self-sufficiency in the developing world. The revenue from tropical cash crop exports cannot buy food security when the price of food commodities rises three times as fast as the price of cash crops, as the did since the World Trade Organization went into effect in 1995. More free trade will only increase dependency on food imports, undermine the livelihoods of farmers and subject hundreds of millions of people to the vagaries of the global commodity markets.

"The administration's language on high-yield seeds may just be shorthand for the false technological panacea of genetically modified crops as a solution to hunger, drought and climate change - although to date no drought-tolerant genetically modified seeds exist. The biotechnology industry's model of high-priced seeds tied to high-priced agrochemicals will be unaffordable to billions of small farmers. Instead, the agribusiness driven model aims to create giant commercial farms, reliant on soil depleting and polluting agrochemicals that will drive family farmers off the land. This will only destroy the long-term food security and sustainability of cultivated land and rural communities in the developing world.

"President Obama must chart a new way forward that is untethered from the agribusiness special interests that have dominated the debate for decades. The world needs a leader that can promote a genuinely sustainable global food security plan that is designed for and by farmers in the developing world."

Food & Water Watch, a nonprofit consumer organization based in Washington, D.C., works to ensure clean water and safe food in the United States and around the world.  We challenge the corporate control and abuse of our food and water resources by empowering people to take action and transforming the public consciousness about what we eat and drink.  For more information, visit www.foodandwaterwatch.org.

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In the 80's I was visiting the office of a developing (4.00 / 3)
countries Ag Minister.

In the waiting room where a couple Ag chemical and seed salesmen who were very hyped up since the US Ag aid funds had just been released to the countries account.  They expected to get the lions share of the US taxpayers dollars and beat their sales quota for the year.

Is it any wonder that these developing country Ag ministers resit being used as the intermediary for US corporate Ag welfare.    


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