Bill Clinton: "We Blew It" On Global Food
Today's global food crisis shows "we all blew it, including me when I was
president," by treating food crops as commodities instead of as a vital
right of the world's poor, Bill Clinton told a U.N. gathering on Thursday.
The former president, addressing a high-level event marking Oct. 16's World
Food Day, also saluted U.S. President George W. Bush - "one thing he got
right" - for pushing for a change in U.S. food-aid policy. He chided the
bipartisan coalition in the U.S. Congress that killed the idea.
Clinton took aim at decades of international policymaking by the World
Bank, the International Monetary Fund and others, encouraged by the U.S.,
that pressured Africans in particular into dropping government subsidies for
fertilizer, improved seed and other farm inputs, in economic "structural
adjustments" required to win northern aid. Africa's food self-sufficiency
subsequently declined and food imports rose.
Now skyrocketing prices in the international grain trade - on average more
than doubling between 2006 and early 2008 - have pushed many in poor
countries deeper into poverty.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the U.N. gathering that prices on
some food items are "500 percent higher than normal" in Haiti and Ethiopia,
for example. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization estimates the number
of undernourished people worldwide rose to 923 million last year.
"Food is not a commodity like others," Clinton said. "We should go back to a
policy of maximum food self-sufficiency. It is crazy for us to think we can
develop countries around the world without increasing their ability to feed
themselves."
He noted that northern food aid could itself be a tool for boosting African
agriculture.
It is crazy for us to think we can develop countries around the world
without increasing their ability to feed themselves. Former President Bill
Clinton Canada, for example, requires that 50 percent of its aid go as cash
- not as Canadian grain - to buy crops locally in Africa or other recipient
countries. But U.S. law requires that almost all U.S. aid be American-grown
food commodities, benefiting U.S. farmers. Bush proposed earlier this year
that 25 percent of future aid be cash.
"A bipartisan coalition (in Congress) defeated him," the Democratic
ex-president said of his Republican successor. "He was right, and both
parties that defeated him were wrong."
Clinton also criticized the heavy U.S. reliance on a food crop, corn, to
produce ethanol for fuel, which helped drive up grain prices worldwide.
"If we're going to do biofuels, we ought to look at the more efficient
kind," he said, referring, for example, to the jatropha shrub, a nonfood
source that grows on land not suitable for grain.
The U.N. General Assembly president, Nicaragua's Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann,
agreed, speaking of the "madness of converting crops into fuel."
D'Escoto expressed disappointment that of $22 billion pledged by richer
nations to help poorer nations' agriculture in this year of food crisis,
only $2.2 billion has been made available.
Opening the hour-long meeting, U.N. chief Ban expressed dismay at the
potential impact of the global financial crisis on world hunger.
"While the international community is focused on turmoil in the global
economy, I am extremely concerned that not enough is being done to help
those who are suffering most: the poorest of the poor," he said.
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