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How Goldman Gambled on Starvation
Speculators set up a casino where the chips were the stomachs of millions. What does it say about our system that we can so casually inflict so much pain?
By now, you probably think your opinion of Goldman Sachs and its swarm of Wall Street allies has rock-bottomed at raw loathing. You're wrong. There's more. It turns out that the most destructive of all their recent acts has barely been discussed at all. Here's the rest. This is the story of how some of the richest people in the world - Goldman, Deutsche Bank, the traders at Merrill Lynch, and more - have caused the starvation of some of the poorest people in the world.
It starts with an apparent mystery. At the end of 2006, food prices across the world started to rise, suddenly and stratospherically. Within a year, the price of wheat had shot up by 80 per cent, maize by 90 per cent, rice by 320 per cent. In a global jolt of hunger, 200 million people - mostly children - couldn't afford to get food any more, and sank into malnutrition or starvation. There were riots in more than 30 countries, and at least one government was violently overthrown. Then, in spring 2008, prices just as mysteriously fell back to their previous level. Jean Ziegler, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, calls it "a silent mass murder", entirely due to "man-made actions."
Earlier this year I was in Ethiopia, one of the worst-hit countries, and people there remember the food crisis as if they had been struck by a tsunami. "My children stopped growing," a woman my age called Abiba Getaneh, told me. "I felt like battery acid had been poured into my stomach as I starved. I took my two daughters out of school and got into debt. If it had gone on much longer, I think my baby would have died."
Most of the explanations we were given at the time have turned out to be false. It didn't happen because supply fell: the International Grain Council says global production of wheat actually increased during that period, for example. It isn't because demand grew either: as Professor Jayati Ghosh of the Centre for Economic Studies in New Delhi has shown, demand actually fell by 3 per cent. Other factors - like the rise of biofuels, and the spike in the oil price - made a contribution, but they aren't enough on their own to explain such a violent shift.
To understand the biggest cause, you have to plough through some concepts that will make your head ache - but not half as much as they made the poor world's stomachs ache.
For over a century, farmers in wealthy countries have been able to engage in a process where they protect themselves against risk. Farmer Giles can agree in January to sell his crop to a trader in August at a fixed price. If he has a great summer, he'll lose some cash, but if there's a lousy summer or the global price collapses, he'll do well from the deal. When this process was tightly regulated and only companies with a direct interest in the field could get involved, it worked.
Then, through the 1990s, Goldman Sachs and others lobbied hard and the regulations were abolished. Suddenly, these contracts were turned into "derivatives" that could be bought and sold among traders who had nothing to do with agriculture. A market in "food speculation" was born.
So Farmer Giles still agrees to sell his crop in advance to a trader for £10,000. But now, that contract can be sold on to speculators, who treat the contract itself as an object of potential wealth. Goldman Sachs can buy it and sell it on for £20,000 to Deutsche Bank, who sell it on for £30,000 to Merrill Lynch - and on and on until it seems to bear almost no relationship to Farmer Giles's crop at all.
If this seems mystifying, it is. John Lanchester, in his superb guide to the world of finance, Whoops! Why Everybody Owes Everyone and No One Can Pay, explains: "Finance, like other forms of human behaviour, underwent a change in the 20th century, a shift equivalent to the emergence of modernism in the arts - a break with common sense, a turn towards self-referentiality and abstraction and notions that couldn't be explained in workaday English." Poetry found its break with realism when T S Eliot wrote "The Wasteland". Finance found its Wasteland moment in the 1970s, when it began to be dominated by complex financial instruments that even the people selling them didn't fully understand.
So what has this got to do with the bread on Abiba's plate? Until deregulation, the price for food was set by the forces of supply and demand for food itself. (This was already deeply imperfect: it left a billion people hungry.) But after deregulation, it was no longer just a market in food. It became, at the same time, a market in food contracts based on theoretical future crops - and the speculators drove the price through the roof.
Here's how it happened. In 2006, financial speculators like Goldmans pulled out of the collapsing US real estate market. They reckoned food prices would stay steady or rise while the rest of the economy tanked, so they switched their funds there. Suddenly, the world's frightened investors stampeded on to this ground.
So while the supply and demand of food stayed pretty much the same, the supply and demand for derivatives based on food massively rose - which meant the all-rolled-into-one price shot up, and the starvation began. The bubble only burst in March 2008 when the situation got so bad in the US that the speculators had to slash their spending to cover their losses back home.
When I asked Merrill Lynch's spokesman to comment on the charge of causing mass hunger, he said: "Huh. I didn't know about that." He later emailed to say: "I am going to decline comment." Deutsche Bank also refused to comment. Goldman Sachs were more detailed, saying they sold their index in early 2007 and pointing out that "serious analyses ... have concluded index funds did not cause a bubble in commodity futures prices", offering as evidence a statement by the OECD.
How do we know this is wrong? As Professor Ghosh points out, some vital crops are not traded on the futures markets, including millet, cassava, and potatoes. Their price rose a little during this period - but only a fraction as much as the ones affected by speculation. Her research shows that speculation was "the main cause" of the rise.
So it has come to this. The world's wealthiest speculators set up a casino where the chips were the stomachs of hundreds of millions of innocent people. They gambled on increasing starvation, and won. Their Wasteland moment created a real wasteland. What does it say about our political and economic system that we can so casually inflict so much pain?
If we don't re-regulate, it is only a matter of time before this all happens again. How many people would it kill next time? The moves to restore the pre-1990s rules on commodities trading have been stunningly sluggish. In the US, the House has passed some regulation, but there are fears that the Senate - drenched in speculator-donations - may dilute it into meaninglessness. The EU is lagging far behind even this, while in Britain, where most of this "trade" takes place, advocacy groups are worried that David Cameron's government will block reform entirely to please his own friends and donors in the City.
Only one force can stop another speculation-starvation-bubble. The decent people in developed countries need to shout louder than the lobbyists from Goldman Sachs. The World Development Movement is launching a week of pressure this summer as crucial decisions on this are taken: text WDM to 82055 to find out what you can do.
The last time I spoke to her, Abiba said: "We can't go through that another time. Please - make sure they never, never do that to us again."
- Posted in




51 Comments so far
Show AllThese food riots occurred abruptly with US Federal bailout funding of financial institutions, and ended a few weeks later almost as abruptly with nary an explanation in any media source. My suspicion has always been the influx of bailout money allowed financial institutions to speculate in commodities markets. Doing so, they came to control the price of food. This led to food riots in numerous countries, which abruptly stopped within a week or two of beginning. Explanation for this precipitate halt to the rioting has all the appearance of political intervention. Effectively, governments informed financial speculators they could not control markets in food. This is important, because shortly thereafter, stock prices began to escalate. My guess here is, no longer able to invest in commodities, financial investors shifted investment into intangible stock shares, no longer controlling tangible commodities. Ahhh, but government ought not intervene in the perfect pricing of the unconstrained market!
This is just one more example of bankster greed and their complete disregard of humanity and ethics.
These people must be stopped.
Jim Shea
If you attack this or that company, or some vague group of poeple called "banksters", you are barking up the wrong tree.
It is a system that must be attacked, not individuals or organizations whom, after all, are only acting under the rules of the system in which they are immersed.
It's the system they lobbied hard to create. They insisted on it. They spent money to get it. And, yes, we know who those individuals and organizations are. Some are named in this article. They should be attacked for what they've done.
GREED, so it seems, really is the worst of the deadly sins. Unfortunately, it is not the greedy who do the suffering, it is the innocent women and children.
Anyone who still has doubts that what we are experiencing is a global class war created and enabled by banksters, politicians, corpora-fascists and Zionists the world over needs to think again.
GREED, so it seems, really is the worst of the deadly sins. Unfortunately, it is not the greedy who do the suffering, it is the innocent women and children.
Anyone who still has Doubts that what we are experiencing is a global class war created and enabled by banksters, politicians, corpora-fascists and Zionists the world over needs to Think Again!
And RHLOH,
You obviously are taking money from Israel to be here on this blog.
RFLOH,
If you are looking up "patsy", bonne chance!
I like this piece a lot, but still find it amusing in a sick sort of way that after all the damage these guys have done over so many years, that the answer from so many is "re-regulate", as if there's even an iota of reason to let them even play the game at all.
Take all social necessities out of the hands of private actors and put them into the hands of all people. Democratize economics.
Goldman Sachs knew what they were doing and was perfectly aware of the system set up to "protect and defend" such corporate criminals. That said, unless they had no idea of their future outcome, they didn't really gamble. Please get your vocabulary right and study some basics of finance so that you know how they rig the game ahead of time !
The best and brightest? If they had no idea, they are stupid and do not deserve the monstrous salaries they get. They should be fired. Or if they did know, they should be put before a firing squad.
Joe
Kind of hard to believe and sad, that such things could even happen. But yes, the senseless of greed allows it. How much money is enough?
The first ones to put in jail, or in front of a firing squad, take your pick, are the politicians that allowed the deregulation to happen in the first place.
Its so disgusting.
I vote for the firing squad.
I'm good with that, the firing squad. All these moles burrowing away for gain at the most vulnerable areas of society need to pay their dues. What must be done is best done quickly......
I repeat, these outrages have nothing to do with "greed" or any other "moral" failings of individual people. THE PROBLEM IS THE SYSTEM! To blame it on "greed" is to put effect before cause.
OK - let's call it greed with benefits.
Joe
You have it backwards.
Greed/vanity is the cause.
The system is the effect.
The system was designed by people.
Next time you see a poor person, or perhaps if you are a poor person, please realize it is not usually an accident or act of nature nor a result of personal failing. Persistent widespread poverty is the result of many deliberate actions and decisions by the powerful to arrogate wealth only to themselves, regardless of the consequences to others.
Sometimes it is clear, and sometimes it is hidden by complexity and secrecy. Once in a while the dots are connected so even the dullest can see what is going on. What Goldman Sachs does is murder, plain and simple.
(24,000 children die every day due to poverty. It is an unacknowledged holocaust of over 8 million innocents every year. Some of them even live in the US and the number is likely to increase. All kinds of high level decisions about globalization, the environment, labor organizing, waging war, agriculture, political power, women's rights and ownership of natural wealth contribute to this statistic. There are ruthless choices about which human beings are valuable and which are not.)
Joe
damn-skippy, you nailed it. The moral code of our Age:
If I don't do it someone else will, and it may as well be me that makes a buck on the deal.
Withdrawn by author.
Joe
By their nature all economic systems, through their policies, create economic winners and losers. An ethical system (insert government) takes care of those who, through no fault of their own, are abandoned or punished by those policies.
True. An ethical system also rewards socially useful work commensurate to its value. Any weeks worth of honest work would be enough for survival of worker and dependents. In an ethical system a nursery school teacher would not become poor, a musician who causes joy for thousands might do quite well and a commodities trader would not become wealthy. Come to think of it, there would not be any commodities traders.
Joe
Best explanation of how we got here? "Capitalism Hits the Fan" a lecture by UMASS Professor Richard Wolff. Very compelling. It's required viewing in my house. (No wonder I get no visitors. Even the Jehovah's Witnesses stay away.)
Agreed, "Capitalism Hits the Fan" provides some great insight into several important aspects of a few of the existential crises facing humanity at this moment, but check out Crash Course on Youtube. Chapters 15-20 are the essential chapters to watch if you already have a fair degree of sophistication regarding Macro-Economics, energy markets, etc., you can skip the previous chapters to save time.
What the author is talking about are credit default swaps which built on the speculation of asset-backed securities. The type of asset-backed security that has seen the most speculation and caused the greatest turmoil in the market are mortgage-backed securities. Mortgage-backed securities were created in the 70's by US government corporations like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac which were created as a part of the New Deal. The government and liberal politicians as much as the private market and perhaps even more so have been guilty of greed for power and money.
These simplistic moralistic tales are ridiculous. The world and the way it works is much more complicated. I'd save this article to read as a bedtime story to 5-year-olds.
One more thing... food commodities have been traded for centuries and there have been periods of speculation and inflation many times before. This period seems to be based on a flight of money away from stocks and as protection from a falling dollar much like investment in gold. Speculation and inflation in food is nothing new and has happened many times before: sugar in the early 70's, cotton in 1903, wheat in late 1800's etc... It would be a very long list. To blame it on credit default swaps is stupid. Although I agree that new financial instruments should have new rules and I agree that some financial instruments are so complicated that they have little basis in reality. A lot of the greatest debt-based speculation and complicated financial instruments come directly from the Federal Government, the US Treasury and the Fed. As a matter of fact, they themselves have little basis in reality and that's why people start to put money in something like food and gold.
I agree that this article's author has written a simplistic, one-sided view of the recent food price run-up. I agree with the author that speculation was allowed to run completely wild in a much too unregulated casino. But why did this speculation begin and have quite good staying power? There were basically two reasons. Supplies were continually falling for several commodities, including corn and soybeans, and ethanol and biofuels were ramping up, causing further shortages and above all, worries over shortages. Fear, worry and greed drive the commodity markets. The good news was that high prices meant farmers went all out to produce high yields. The high prices gave us more production and eventually pushed prices down. The basic good news about capitalism is that high prices generally cure high prices with increased production.
Spoken like a true "free market" leech.
I doubt there is any dust accumulating on your copy of Atlas Shrugged.
biofuels causing food shortages is the biggest lie of all
Thanks for telling us exactly how the gun works.
Joe
"A lot of the greatest debt-based speculation and complicated financial instruments come directly from the Federal Government, the US Treasury and the Fed."
RUBBISH! This is a wild assertion that can't be substantiated. Name the instruments and exactly which of the three entities created them and when. Please do remember that the Fed is a private institution composed of 12 regional privately owned Federal Reserve Banks as well as numerous private banks.
"As a matter of fact, they themselves have little basis in reality and that's why people start to put money in something like food and gold."
So it's just that simple. All a person has to do is just put money into a little food or a little gold, and presto: their money magically turns into more money! So that's how the Warren Buffet billionaire class does it! Any Ethiopian should be able to do it. He/she just needs to put their money into a little food or gold! Brilliant!
Finance capitalism is just so fun and easy. And don't forget the wisdom of the marketplace, and who needs to worry about all those invisible hands.
It is all linked and controlled, the Hunt brothers were responsible for the sugar incident in the 70's that resulted in high prices in gold and silver. These are all contrived with anticipated results. You are correct though these events happen all the time but many are not as noticable and traceable to specific entities.
Nothing in your post is an argument as to why there should be no stricter regulation, and much stricter capital controls.
You ignore the distinction made by the author between traditional agricultural futures, and deregulated futures speculation in the form of derivatives, that only happened AFTER deregulation.
The world's bankers and financial services industries sit on top of this heap of destruction, wrought by speculators driving up notional values of derivatives to 1.4 Quadrillion, but for you, the onus is on who exactly? The "simplistic" moralists?
good answer, I agree with you. Your highly uncivil tone to my post surprised and disappointed.
It was Goldman and the Hedge Funds
They were able to take control of the commodity markets when they bought grain storage facilities from companies like Cargill.
There is limit to how many futures contracts a speculator can hold. This rule is in place to keep speculators from controlling the markets. Once the Wall St crowd became "hedgers" they could dramatically increase the number of contracts in their portfolio.
The result was dramatic and devastating as they drove the price of commodities beyond any rational pricing levels for all but the Wall St crowd. Real hedgers, farmers and grain elevator operators, were forced to make margin calls (putting up more cash to cover a position when the markets move against you) almost every day until the cost of interest from their bank loans, became more expensive than the price of the grains they were hedging and they had to take a big loss to get out of the rigged markets.
Wall St made billions but farmers, the poor and middle class were the victims.
It can happen again since nothing has been done to curb the over-leveraged position of the hedge funds. Hedge funds are highly leveraged to begin with. They use borrowed money to purchase leveraged commodity contracts. At some point the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has to put a stop to over leveraged players who have a distinct advantage over farmers.
The result is that most farmers and real hedgers are now avoiding the commodity markets, that were specifically created to help them manage their crop risk. Just like the stock exchanges today, computers control the markets.
Starving people and bankrupt farmers are the result of Wall St greed and impotent/captured regulators.
Will C, you are an arrogant ass with no real understanding of the real world.
Don't buy anything from anyone you don't know and trust.
In the history of China, when push came to shove as in moments like this the speculators were dealt with by taking them out with a hoe. This has seemed savage to many but nothing can be as savage as a man and his family living high on the deaths of the families he has herded into a financial corner of ruin while he hides behind the 'law', or such as the Free Market, Jesus, YHWH and Islam,----or even Communism.
In fact, such continue to be dealt with like this in China, which is one reason the leaders of the Communist Party are so frightened from time to time.
Anyway Confucius and Laotzi (Tao Teh Ching) repetitively said this was not only right but necessary and was moreover just deserts, meaning the injustice that often accompanies a revolution is part of the human condition and at the last resort, virtue is its own reward.
We must take them seriously. They first expressed the ground rules of, if not the greatest then very nearly the greatest civilisation on earth. Moreover we must discover why despite many incidents of this nature and occasional great destruction and collapse, China has never collapsed into systematic mayhem, as evidenced by a history of more then 3000yrs and a common language that is still written as it was more than 2000yrs ago.
I've some questions on this article: 1.) By what process can a group of individuals or group of corporations be brought before the ICC in the Hague for Crimes Against Humanity? 2.) How much longer are the Workers of the World (by whom all wealth is produced) going to allow these non-productive parasites to suck the profits of our labour from society, thereby limiting our ability to advance that society? 3.) When will we stop discussing the problem & begin to ACT? 4.) When will we finally realize that capitalism is an economic system that advances by feeding upon it's children? And, finally, Which Side Are You On?
We've given capitalism and it's variants well over two thousand years to prove it's worth. It's obvious that it is a parasitic system that profits but a small minority from the misery of the vast majority. It is, basically, a criminal system.
"We've given capitalism and it's variants well over two thousand years to prove it's worth. It's obvious that it is a parasitic system that profits but a small minority from the misery of the vast majority. It is, basically, a criminal system."
bcsapo:
It's a small "elite" minority that's creating all the misery. There's a brilliant article by Andrew Gavin Marshall at...http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=19873 which talks about these parasites and their fear of global populations waking up to to the realities of how they managed to perpetuate global poverty for their own interests.
Thank you for the excellent link!
I've been following the Elite Psychopaths since October of 2009, largely after watching M. Moore's "Capitalism- The Love Story".
Since I'm grossly over-educated, I couldn't help myself to start writing down my analysis, which I published in "How Psychopaths Destroy Humanity" at:
http://www.selfrepresentedfool.org/id81.html
I've never thought of myself as being "political", but this happened to me 6 months ago. Live and learn.
Man's inhumanity to man! Not even animals behave in such a despicable way.
"Only one force can stop another speculation-starvation-bubble. The decent people in developed countries need to shout louder than the lobbyists from Goldman Sachs."
Wrong. Shouting's not gonna work. Healthcare reform? Wall St. reform? Military withdrawal? How'd that all work out? The whole system needs to be broken. The good news: it's breaking all by itself.
The stock market is in an irreversibe slide. Maybe the next "flash crash" will bring welcome headlines about speculators comitting suicide.
See: "U.S. Experiencing Worst Episode of Prolonged Unemployment Since Great Depression".
Good. Let's send the lumpenprole tea-baggers over to the unemployment office and the free clinic and watch them eat crow. Worked like a charm in the first depression.
Last year the average income for each of the 10 top hedge fund operators was $2.5 billion. Can you imagine a single person "earning" $2.5 billion in one year? Taxes paid on this income, because it is classified through sleight of hand as capital gains was a mere 15%.
Mr. Arnold Hiatt (of Keds Shoes, et. al.) advises a war against fat cats. Mr. Clinton publicly ridiculed him when he made that suggestion at a fat cat dinner.
My little hometown in western PA is losing its sole industry that has been the pillar of the community for 105 years.
Current CEO, Albert P.L. Stroucken, has decided that he'll move the Clarion glass plant, "one of the company's most expensive facilities to operate due to its obsolete infrastructure" to Thailand. No doubt building the "infrastructure" of the plant there will save the company untold money. How? Cheap metal from Korea and coolie labor. The old infrastructure is not for sale. A competitor might buy it.
More stomaches as gambling chips, only these are in my hometown. So Mr. Stroucken thrusts Clarion in the heart with the knife of anti-unionism and efficiency and moves the jobs to Thailand where his profits will be enhanced by those workers’ lack of good wages, no union representation, no healthcare costs, no safety regulations, and unregulated disposal of plant wastes. Will the Thailandese still starve. Probably.
And how much is Mr. Stroucken's income per year? He's not even a hedge fund operator.
Remember Oilbama's mantra of stopping those companies from shipping our jobs overseas?
This country has been, and still is being, sold down the river by Republicans and Democrats alike, and both parties have taken direct action to absolutely decimate the middle class of this country.
oilbama?
"We are doing God's work".- Blankfein CEO of Goldman Sachs.
If that’s true, then God must be a psychopath,
because his disciples are .
Of course, Zionist God is a PSYCHOPATH, just read the Talmud. [1]
Golden Sacks are controlled by Ashkenazi Jews Rothschilds, who have been FINANCING ALL WARS since 1780s and made their fortunes by changing FEES FOR EVERY DEAD SOLDIER ON EITHER SIDE. So, naturally, the more wars, the more killed soldiers, the merrier for psychopaths Rothschilds. [2]-[10]
For more details, references, and links, see "How Psychopaths Destroy Humanity" at p. 386-388:
http://www.selfrepresentedfool.org/id81.html
References:
[1] Jewish religion and Talmud:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7L7cJJ9Wc8
[2] McCain is financed by the Rothschilds (Family tree of Rothschilds):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAggKNhzIo8&feature=related
[3] New World Order- This will make you angry! (nice quotes from Alan Greenspan, Henry Kissinger, even Little Deserter):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9g1UtFDytfk&NR=1
[4] Rothschilds financed Nazi Germany, own 60% of Israel land:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40YGZo4J2W0&feature=related
[5] The Rothschilds (Nice pic of Lord Rothschild and Prescott Bush, the Nazi financier at 4:51):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXVJzXsraX4&feature=related
[6] Rothschild History 001 (JP Morgan was a lieutenant of Rothschilds):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skjgimM4Gtc&feature=related
[7] “The Rothschilds Exposed” (Part 1/3)
The current affairs of Rothschild family (on 11/30/2000 British Evelyn Rothschild married Zionist Lynn Forrester, spent their wedding night at the US White House, then moved to NY to watch 9/11 show from their home terrace; researchers estimate the net worth of Baron Rothschild at $500 TRILLION, more than 50% of the WEALTH OF THE ENTIRE WORLD, owns Reuters (from 1800s), Reuters owns AP; owns the GOLD MINING & minting and picks the GOLD prices on the daily basis, own controlling interest in Royal Dutch Shell; the WEALTH of Evelyn Rothschild can cloth, feed and shelter EVERY HUMAN ON EARTH; his family history began in 18th (about 1770s) Century Germany at Frankfurt on the Mane by a goldsmith and a LOAN SHARK named Mayer Anshelbauer (phonetic), who changed his last name to Rothschild which means “red shield” in German; in 1773 got into the German mercenary war business for profit, collected fees for every dead soldier):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CkzFbKeK5kM&feature=related
“The Rothschilds Exposed” (Part 2/3):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q2Yjoi2_5pw&NR=1
“The Rothschilds Exposed” (Part 3/3):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47WM2BhklmM&feature=related
[8] Zeitgeist- Federal Reserve (Part 1 of 5) (taken from Money Masters)
Zeitgeist- Federal Reserve (Part 2 of 5)
Zeitgeist- Federal Reserve (Part 3 of 5) (US Standard Oil; Prescott Bush; financing of Nazi Germany)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kd169qLGRk&NR=1
Zeitgeist- Federal Reserve (Part 4 of 5)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXZ4xYP53DY&feature=related
[9] The Israel Lobby (Marije Meerman, VPRO Backlight 2007)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N294FMDok98
[10] John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt “The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy” (published 3/23/2006 in London Review of Books);
Middle East Policy XIII (3):29-87
http://www.safecom.org.au/israel-lobby.htm
Check out Mike Davis' "Late Victorian Holocausts" -
Please note that food prices have not come down all that much in much of the world. People are still starving in West Africa, for example, even though food is available. It's just too expensive.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4776836
A reminder of the so-called Irish potato famine, when there were plenty of potatoes, but they all were shipped out of Ireland so the British speculators could get rich while the Irish died. Same old same old. Hurray for Anglo Capitalism. And while we're at it, let's privatize the water systems of the world. How long before air is a hedge fund? Let them breath bottled oxygen.