Business Standard

WHEAT, WAR AND MALTHUS’ PROPHECY

Consumptio­n will exceed food grain production but the world is not on the brink of a hunger crisis

- ISHAAN GERA

In 1798, British philosophe­r and economist Thomas Malthus proposed in an essay that population growth would outpace food production to cause shortages and famine. The “Malthusian catastroph­e” was widely criticised though it was not the first grim theory around population. Three years later, the first official census of the United Kingdom was conducted.

Mal thus was proven wrong, but the theory found resonance during the 1960s when newly independen­t countries wanted to be self-sufficient in food. their reason was not as much population sustenance but freedom from the shack les of dependence. india’ s green Revolution was a step in that direction. times changed. Decades of peace and global is at ion prompted most countries to lib era lise trade rules for food commoditie­s.

For instance, rice trade increased 22 percent between 2014 and 2022. trade in wheat is expected to increase between 2017-18 and 2021-22( july- june period ), without any change in production over these years.

As the old world order is challenged, countries again fear running out of food grains. Earlier this week, India banned most wheat exports. Indonesia banned palm oil exports, and Europe is being criticised for its farm-to-fork strategy promoting sustainabl­e farming, with animal feed and agricultur­e industry groups saying it will undermine regional food security.

A Business Standard analysis found that the problem of food insecurity — the number of people with insufficie­nt access to food — has been piling up for years; the Russia-ukraine crisis has only accentuate­d it. Data from the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on’s report, “The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World”, shows that worldwide, the number of moderately or severely food insecure people rose to 30.6 per cent in 2020, compared to 22.6 per cent in 2014. In Africa, food insecurity increased from 47.3 per cent to 59.6 per cent during this period as countries here focused on export crops instead of staples.

Meanwhile, production has not kept pace with consumptio­n. Data from the United States Department of Agricultur­e shows that global consumptio­n of corn, wheat and rice will outstrip production in the coming year. While this would not translate into shortages immediatel­y, a sustained period of production and consumptio­n gap may cause problems.

Mal thus’ claim appears true to some, but what he did not perceive was human capacity for innovation. within a few decades of his moo rings, me chan is at ion improved farm productivi­ty. will technology come to the rescue?

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