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The True Cost of Cheap Food
The globalisation of the food market has made food cheap, but who is benefiting?
Cheap food causes hunger.
On its face, the statement makes no sense. If food is cheaper it’s more affordable and more people should be able to get an adequate diet. That is true for people who buy food, such as those living in cities. But it is quite obviously not true if you’re the one growing the food. You’re getting less for your crops, less for your work, less for your family to live on. That is as true for Vermont dairy farmers as it is for rice farmers in the Philippines. Dairy farmers today are getting prices for their milk that are well below their costs of production. They are putting less food on their own tables. And they are going out of business at an alarming rate. When the economic dust settles, this will leave us with fewer family farmers producing the dairy products most of us depend on.
This is the central contradiction of cheap food. Low agricultural prices cause hunger in the short term among farmers. And they cause food insecurity in the long term because they reduce both the number of farmers and the money they have to invest in producing more food.
An estimated 70% of the world’s poor live in rural areas and depend either directly or indirectly on agriculture. Cheap food has made them hungry and kept them in poverty. It has also starved the countryside in the developing world of much-needed agricultural investment. Farmers have nothing to invest if they are losing money on their crops.
The food crisis has indeed served as a wake-up call for governments and international agencies responsible for such matters. Among those most shaken from their policy slumber were officials at the World Bank, which cut the share of its spending on agricultural development from 30% in 1980 to just 6% in 2006. But, lo and behold, the World Bank’s World Development Report for 2008 carried the subtitle Agriculture for Development. It was the first time in twenty-five years that the Bank had focused its signature publication on agriculture. The renewed attention was welcome, as it included a call to reinvest in smallholder agriculture, not just large-scale export crops.
The Bank, of course, studiously avoided taking any responsibility for having promoted the very policies that caused agriculture to be neglected in the first place: not only the cuts in aid and investment, but the structural adjustment programmes, imposed as conditions on its loans, which gutted the capacity of most governments to support domestic agriculture.
These same structural adjustment programmes were part of the campaign to get governments out of the economy altogether. The argument was that the market should be allowed to work its magic, to allocate resources more efficiently, to set prices without government distortions. Trade policy needed to reduce the government role as well, cutting protective tariffs and quotas and price supports, following the theory of comparative advantage.
In agriculture, what that meant for developing countries was that if you couldn’t produce basic grains as efficiently – read ‘cheaply’ – as they could in the US, or Australia, or Brazil, you just shouldn’t produce basic grains. It would be cheaper – “more efficient” – to buy them on the international market. Instead, maybe you should produce, say, flowers for export, or winter strawberries for the US market. But maybe you shouldn’t produce anything because maybe your land is bad and you have no roads to get produce to a port anyway. So maybe there’s nothing the market wants from you. And it doesn’t need your home-grown grains any more because they are being imported.
That’s really how the theory works. The idea is that a country can import all the food it needs, and it should do so if it can get that food more cheaply from abroad than it could by having its own farmers grow it. One obvious problem with this approach is that if farmers stop growing food, their families don’t have anything to eat, and if they can’t get jobs, they have no money to buy food.
Secondly, a country can end up in a situation of food dependency, which becomes particularly problematic when prices spike and supplies get tight. That is what we saw recently with what became known as the food crisis. Countries like the Philippines couldn’t get the rice they needed. They had stopped producing enough rice to protect themselves from such a market shock, and they couldn’t get anyone to sell it to them because governments were concerned about feeding their own people first.
This exposed the dangers of following policies that say you can get all the cheap food you need out in the international market. A lot of countries have taken note of that; the Philippines is now on a multi-year national campaign to restore self-sufficiency in rice production.
One place where the government seems to have kept its ideological blinkers firmly in place is Mexico. There, in the birthplace of corn, where the crop was domesticated into one of the world’s most important food crops, there were tortilla riots in the streets as people couldn’t afford this most basic staple. In the fifteen years since the North American Free Trade Agreement took effect, US corn has flooded Mexico at prices half what it cost to produce in Mexico. Mexico now depends on imports from the US for more than a third of its corn. Some two million hungry farmers have left agriculture under the flood of cheap food.
The food crisis also illustrates what some have called the globalisation of market failure. Globalisation involves opening markets and bringing things that are produced in different parts of the world into direct competition. The assumption – and the integrity of the economic theory hinges on such assumptions – is that those markets work; that prices actually reflect the real values of what’s being traded. In agriculture, the assumption is that efficiency equals high yield, which means low price, which reflects the actual value of what’s produced. When it doesn’t, economists call it a market failure. Agriculture is rife with market failures. You can see it in the Mexico-US trade in corn.
Environmental costs are one of the key areas where the market fails to adequately value both costs and benefits. The US specialises in environmental costs. Corn is one of the most polluting US crops of all. Excessive water and chemical use, run-off of fertilisers into waterways, the dead zone at the mouth of the Mississippi River in the Gulf of Mexico: all are examples of high environmental costs from US corn production. Producers and traders pay virtually none of the costs of those damages, and the price of corn when it goes across the border into Mexico does not reflect these environmental costs.
What happens on the Mexican side? Well, the smaller producers are maintaining great biodiversity – both wild and in corn varieties – with low-input systems. These positive contributions go unrewarded by the market. Corn biodiversity has virtually no value in the global marketplace, yet these corn seeds are the building block for future varieties of corn: ones we will need to withstand climate change, deal with pesticide resistance, and so on. The price of Mexican corn does not reflect these contributions to the common good.
When you globalise trade, you also globalise market failure. You get under-priced US corn coming into direct competition with under-valued Mexican corn. Mexican corn loses that competition, but not because it’s less ‘efficient’. A Mexican farmer once said, “We’ve been producing corn in Mexico for 8,000 years. If we don’t have a comparative advantage in corn, where do we have a comparative advantage?” He’s right. The problem is that comparative advantage as defined by the global marketplace doesn’t value the advantage that Mexican corn offers. And in the deregulated marketplace, the only value is how cheap something is.
The globalisation of market failure gives us a worsening environment, increasing poverty among food producers, increasing food dependence, and hunger. That is why one of the main culprits of the food crisis is our blind pursuit of cheap food.
Globalisation cheapens everything. The problem is that some things just shouldn’t be cheapened. The market is very good at establishing the value of many things but it is not a good substitute for human values. Societies need to determine their own human values, not let the market do it for them. There are some essential things, such as our land and the life-sustaining foods it can produce, that should not be cheapened.
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16 Comments so far
Show AllWow, looking at the family budget, food is anything but cheap. Maybe the farmers don't get much, but processors take us all to the bank. Ironically, its more expensive to eat healthy than eat the processed high fat/salt crap. Everything is ass backwards.
If this is what it means to have cheap food, hate to see what most folks will eat, once they raise the prices! Anybody bought a box of cereal lately?
A bag of oatmeal is likely 1/10th cost of processed/packaged cereal. And a bowl of oatmeal takes 1.5 minutes to cook in a microwave, for those who need convenience.
Oatmeal is great for sure, but it may be difficult to make the children eat it every day. Unfortunately, though I love it, it doesn't agree with my system anymore. I love wheat germ, as well, but the price is high. Sesame seeds, as well as other seeds and nuts, are healthy and tasty substitutes for meat, but now always cheap. Buying veggies in season saves. Still, food is a major expense in a family of four, especially where palates vary. No wonder so many are on food stamps now.
"Still, food is a major expense in a family of four, especially where palates vary. No wonder so many are on food stamps now."
Honestly the concept of being picky about what you eat is a very indulgent one, in America you can get strawberries flown in from south america during winter, what we forget is that the earth only has a certain capacity for feeding organisms. With tech we can save and farm better, plus while you can scream about the evils of globalization, keep in mind just 100 years ago if the local crops didn't grow people would starve and die. Period, now you can get some rice or grain from a place 400 miles away. Is it always that simple, no, but the option exist...
We need to cut back on food stamps for just any food, ( seriously, does your family of 4 need 3 12 packs of Pepsi), and route the surplus food from farms directly to those in need. Theres no reason to waste food when people are starving, but don't blame international trade since now we live in a Era when we can see hunger becoming a thing of the past in a few years...
PS: Lets change the mentality of the MIC, Lockeed Martin will surely start making food packets if congress started allocating 700 billion a year to international food aid....
Actually, we eat very little 'junk food,' and less soft drinks...though they are cheaper than real fruit juice, for example. Do you, yourself, like every food? Try to force your children to eat what they hate? Eat the same thing everyday? My point is that it's often more expensive to eat healthy, than to eat subsidized junk. And that eating healthy with few frills is still a major expense for any family budget.
It's easy to say you're not indulgent or picky when you're half starved, and have no choice in the matter. Also, nature has provided us with a variety of foods, each group nutritionally complementing another group. And for health reasons one should be picky--if one has that option.
The food industry spends billions of dollars brainwashing little kids. Ronald McDonald gets to dress up in a clown suite and market MSG laced foods to infants.
Even the Amish have trouble keeping the corporate food industry brainwashing away from their kids, in a house with a TV it's impossible.
As to the costs of foods, if a kid eats cereal from a box with a movie cartoon character on the box the movie cartoon got paid more than the farmer that grew the grain the cereal was made from.
One acre of good Midwestern farm land (the area of a football field 97 yards long) can produce 10,000 pounds of corn in one growing season. At current prices the farmer gets $665.00 for 10,000 pounds of corn delivered to the grain elevator at a very low moisture content. (six and a half cents a pound) The cost of growing that 10,000 pounds of corn is over $600.00 so unless the farmer is farming thousands of acres he is not getting rich. The corporate / government warped economics of farming is driving all but the biggest farmers off the land.
Given that food at the grocery is expensive and food as it leaves the farm is cheap who's making the big bucks? Every huge corporation that touches our food between the farm and your food pantry plus those that sell stuff to farmers that cut into the farmers profit on the cost side of growing food. A bag of seed corn that sold for $20.00 in 1975 now sells for more than $200.00, the corn that the seed grows sold for $1.50 - $2.00 a bushel then, $3.80 a bushel now. (a bushel of corn weighs 56 pounds...that's shelled corn at a low moisture content, not the ears of corn in a little wicker basket you see in commercials.)
Sure, then the kids have you locked away for teh Childs abuse :) LOL
sierra7
True, cereal has skyrocketed again....but, that's not only because of energy costs but companies squeezing as much as possible for their shareholders.
As we give up our ability to produce "locally" we increase the energy costs, along with the concomitant environmental problems, because we have become to believe in the "efficiency of the marketplace."
Americans are thoroughly indoctrinated (almost all) in believing in this system that has been sold to them...and their attention span is no longer than 3 miserable seconds so that now they become bewildered because prices of food in some case soar out of sight.
Welcome to the world that has been created just for you...so you can slave, spend and die within the proper parameters of "structured" globalization.
Our urban centers, large and small up until the 1960's were surrounded with small family farms that produced and consumed for the local economy. Since then, major food chain stores strangled the markets along with the housing markets, paving over some of the most productive land on earth.
Along with this sorbid tale, is the one of the major agricultural corporations, like Monsanto, etc., that are "buying" up as many "original" seeds as possible so as to acquire eventual patent rights to those seeds that are so valuable to any society. That is very, very dangerous.
We are now paying for this ecological and societal disaster...and it's going to get lots worse.
Health care, food independence are two things no country can afford to ignore....they ignore them at their peril..both can become far more hazardous to their existence than any act of "terror."
This is a world created for consumption, not of the intellect, but of the body.....it is a world that we have created for ourselves because we don't (some of us do) pay attention what our politicians, in bed with money, are doing to our lives and to those of our children.
Welcome to the world ruled by corporations.
No mention of subsidies? Especially when you are writing about cheap corn and comparative advantage?
Try again.
Ditto - I checked the page over twice - SUBSIDIES and Externalized costs are the issue. Fair Trade - my Ass !
Moreover, there is a hidden time bomb - GMO Corn. It is already wreaking havok on the diversity of native corn species in Mexico. Thank you Monsanto - you f#$%king Criminal bastards.
Not to mention Dairy subsidies. Gods wheres a Golden Fleese when you need one!
sierra7 writes:
"Along with this sorbid [sic] tale, is the one of the major agricultural corporations, like Monsanto, etc., that are "buying" up as many "original" seeds as possible so as to acquire eventual patent rights to those seeds that are so valuable to any society. That is very, very dangerous.
"We are now paying for this ecological and societal disaster...and it's going to get lots worse."
True. And the article fails to observe that at least in the case of Mexico-U.S. corn issues, it is NOT an issue of "market" "efficiencies" that is killing Mexican agriculture. U.S. corn production is highly subsidized by our federal agriculture policies. NAFTA is NOT "free trade." It is a war by the elites on the poor.
I forget which U.S president said we would "never" use food as a weapon, but it was a lie. There is such a thing as "Fascist food," and we are eating it every day. And our Genetically Modified (GM) corn is invading Mexico, with pollen drift contaminating their native biodiversity. This is occurring through the complicity of the two countries' elites. Drive yoeman farmers off their land, force them into the cities where they barely survive as wage slaves, and you will get a world of Haiti's.
Give corporations "free speech" and "free trade" and the right to patent your genes or other genes which hold the promise of curing corporate-induced diseases such as diabetes, and what have you got?
Global agricultural policy is strategically fundamental. This is really a war. And in this context, the debate about climate change is a diversion. World agriculture policy has changed the landscape far more rapidly (e.g., economic policies that make it "efficient" to destroy rain forests and jungles to plant corn and soy and palm oil plantations...). The damage is a result of intentional policies, not "the market."
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dated info from Wikipedia:
2004 U.S. Crop Subsidies[12]
Commodity Millions of US$ Share
Feed grains, mostly corn 2,841 35.4%
Upland cotton and ELS cotton 1,420 17.7%
Wheat 1,173 14.6%
Rice 1,130 14.1%
Soybeans and products 610 7.6%
Dairy 295 3.7%
Peanuts 259 3.2%
Sugar 61 0.8%
Minor oilseeds 29 0.4%
Tobacco 18 0.2%
Wool and mohair 12 0.1%
Vegetable oil products 11 0.1%
Honey 3 0.0%
Other crops 160 2.0%
Total 8,022 100%
increasingly now cash rich nations--knowing they cannot invest their money and earn higher return in today’s global financial markets --are beginning to buy land in poor nations such as Malagasy Republic, Ethiopia, Uganda etc. and grow food in order to guarantee food security to their own nation.
This modern land grab of poor nations--who often lack the the capital stock to farm and feed themselves--is a form of new international agro imperialism and is as reprehensible as the practice of Vulture Fund owners who buy and profit from Third world debt.
It's pretty simple that once your country is dependent on other countries for food you have lost your independence. You can be sure that this dependence will be used to manipulate your government.
Hey "Nearly Normal..."---
You are NOT "bipolar"! You have put the whole issue in a nutshell, so to speak.
But then your point also goes down to the local level. How did we become dependent on Kroger's? And United Fruit? How did bananas gain their "comparative advantage" over apples?
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