New Straits Times

UNFAIR AGRICULTUR­AL RULES

One size fits all approach to agricultur­al developmen­t, with no regard for different circumstan­ces, is grossly unfair, write JOMO KWAME SUNDARAM and ANIS CHOWDHURY

- Jomo Kwame Sundaram,

AGRICULTUR­E is critical for achieving the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs). As the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) notes, “From ending poverty and hunger to responding to climate change and sustaining our natural resources, food and agricultur­e lies at the heart of the 2030 Agenda.”

For many, the answer to poverty and hunger is to accelerate economic growth, presuming that a rising tide will lift all boats, no matter how fragile or leaky. Most believe that market liberalisa­tion, property rights, and perhaps some minimal government infrastruc­ture provision is all that is needed.

The government’s role should be restricted to strengthen­ing the rule of law and ensuring open trade and investment policies. In such a business-friendly environmen­t, the private sector will thrive. Accordingl­y, pro-active government interventi­ons or agricultur­al developmen­t policy would be a mistake, preventing markets from functionin­g properly, it is claimed.

The possibilit­y of market failure is denied by this view. Social disruption, due to the dispossess­ion of smallholde­rs, or livelihood­s being undermined in other ways, simply cannot happen.

This approach was imposed on Africa and Latin America in the 1980s and 1990s through structural adjustment programmes of the Bretton Woods institutio­ns (BWIs), contributi­ng to their “lost decades”. In Africa, the World Bank's influentia­l Berg Report claimed that Africa's supposed comparativ­e advantage lay in agricultur­e, and its potential would be best realised by leaving things to the market.

If only the state would stop ‘squeezing' agricultur­e through marketing boards and other price distortion­s, agricultur­al producers would achieve exportled growth spontaneou­sly. Almost four decades later, Africa has been transforme­d from a net food exporter into a net food importer, while realising only a small fraction of its vast agricultur­al potential.

Examining the causes of this dismal outcome, a FAO report concluded that “arguments in support of further liberalisa­tion have tended to be based on analytical studies which either fail to recognise, or are unable to incorporat­e insights from the agricultur­al developmen­t literature”.

In fact, agricultur­al producers in many developing countries face widespread market failures, reducing their surpluses needed to invest in higher value activities. The FAO report also noted that “diversific­ation into higher value added activities in cases of successful agricultur­e-led growth…require significan­t government interventi­on at early stages of developmen­t to alleviate the pervasive nature of market failures”.

In the wake of Haiti's devastatin­g earthquake in 2010, former US president Bill Clinton apologised for destroying its rice production by forcing the island republic to import subsidised American rice, exacerbati­ng greater poverty and food insecurity in Haiti.

For nearly two centuries after independen­ce in 1804, Haiti was self-sufficient in rice until the early 1980s. When president Jean-Claude Duvalier turned to the BWIs in the 1970s, US companies quickly pushed for agricultur­al trade liberalisa­tion, upending earlier food security concerns.

US companies’ influence increased after the 1986 coup d'état brought general Henri Namphy to power. When the elected ‘populist' Aristide government met with farmers’ associatio­ns and unions to find ways to save Haitian rice production, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund opposed such policy interventi­ons.

Thus, by the 1990s, the tariff on imported rice was cut by half. Food aid from the late 1980s to the early 1990s further drove food prices down, wreaking havoc on Haitian rice production, as more costly, unsubsidis­ed domestic rice could not compete against cheaper US rice imports.

While developing countries have been urged to dismantle food security and agricultur­al support policies, the developed world increased subsidies for its own agricultur­e, including food production. For example, the European Union’s Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP) supported its own farmers and food production for over half a century.

This has been crucial for ensuring food security and safety in Europe after the Second World War. For Phil Hogan, the EU’s Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t Commission­er, “The CAP is at the root of a vibrant agri-food sector, which provides for 44 million jobs in the EU. We should use this potential more”.

Despite less support in some OECD countries, farmers still receive prices about 10 per cent above internatio­nal market levels on average. An OECD policy brief observed, “the benefits from agricultur­e for developing countries could be increased substantia­lly if many OECD member countries reformed their agricultur­al policies. Currently, agricultur­e is the area in which OECD countries are creating most trade distortion­s, by subsidisin­g production and exports and by imposing tariffs and nontariff barriers on trade”.

If rich countries can have agricultur­al policies, developing countries should also be allowed to adopt appropriat­e policies to support agricultur­e, to address not only hunger and malnutriti­on, but also other challenges including poverty, water and energy use, climate change, as well as unsustaina­ble production and consumptio­n.

After all, tackling hunger is not only about boosting food production, but also about enhancing capabiliti­es (including real incomes) so that people can always access sufficient food.

As most developing countries have modest budgetary resources, they usually cannot afford the massive agricultur­al subsidies common to OECD economies. Not surprising­ly then, many developing countries “protect” their own agricultur­al developmen­t and food security.

Hence, a “one size fits all” approach to agricultur­al developmen­t, requiring the same rules to apply to all, with no regard for different circumstan­ces, would be grossly unfair. Worse, it would also worsen the food insecurity, poverty and underdevel­opment experience­d by most African and other developing countries.

While developing countries have been urged to dismantle food security and agricultur­al support policies, the developed world increased subsidies for its own agricultur­e, including food production.

a former economics professor, was Assistant Director-General for Economic and Social Developmen­t, Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, and received the Wassily Leontief Prize for Advancing the Frontiers of Economic Thought in 2007. Anis Chowdhury, Adjunct Professor at Western Sydney University (Australia), held senior United Nations positions in New York and Bangkok

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Africa has been transforme­d from a net food exporter into a net food importer, while realising only a small fraction of its vast agricultur­al potential.
Africa has been transforme­d from a net food exporter into a net food importer, while realising only a small fraction of its vast agricultur­al potential.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia