
A
Simple Plan to End Global Hunger
By Gary Morton,
April/May,
2008
I’m writing this on a Sunday, so let me begin
on a faithful note. Around the world people of many religions pray. Humanists
and atheists also have their hopes and perhaps their own form of intellectual
prayer or meditation. Since the majority of us on this planet are poor, most of
the requests are for food and clean water.
Today billions stare in the face of starvation even though there is
enough food produced to feed everyone on the planet. Imagine the catastrophe
occurring when there is truly not enough food for us all.
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Click here for a map of the World's Hungriest
As the situation worsens we see billions paying from half to all of their
income to purchase food. Water is scarce in many parts of the world and there
have been outright riots and unrest in many countries. These include
Haiti,
Egypt,
the
Ivory Coast,
Ethiopia,
the
Philippines,
Indonesia,
Mexico,
El Salvador
and
Afghanistan.
Many people and animals have no food and water: they are dying due to neglect.
Prices of everything from rice to wheat, corn and oils have risen to
unaffordable levels. The causes of these price rises are mostly simple and
immoral. They also show a lack of commitment to the Millennium Development
Goals that world leaders agreed on in 2006. Then it was stated that world hunger
would be cut in half by 2015.
The first problem is Free Trade. The entire trade argument is wrong at its
ethical roots. We need to jettison the concept of Free Trade and replace it with
the concept of Humanitarian Trade. Feed The People Trade or Food For All
Policies that will provide the
poor with food and clean water.
We can’t begin on the road to a solution unless we begin at the
philosophical level and no longer argue over free trade versus protectionism. We
have to make the dispute one of humanitarian solutions and go with whatever mix
of resolutions work.
Hard realities must be faced as there isn’t a world wide
movement towards a socialist or capitalist solution. An approach has to be found
that gets all parties to work together. It is already evident that the richest
and most capitalistic nations see food riots in distant lands as a threat to
their security. This news can be used as a prod to ensure they cooperate and act
with efforts to eliminate world hunger.
Here are some ideas to a future where we’ve all had a drink and dinner.
Lack of wealth redistribution … it is the number one reason for current
world poverty. Hunger and poverty are directly related. The gap between the rich and the poor is a mass murderer. We have
to realize this and change it. The super rich gain no benefit from being ever
richer; it all becomes more money in the bank as the ranks of the poor grow by
the millions. We have to redistribute wealth to save lives, and politicians and
legislators have to see the morality of human life rather than the bribes of
those that want to enrich themselves further for no benefit.
The redistribution of wealth is also wealth
creation as the prosperity of the last century was driven through more people
earning a living wage or better. They spent their money and it drove the
economy. The idea that super wealth in the hands of a few creates prosperity has
always been a myth. We need a world wide Safety Net or a safety net in every
nation. During recent decades of strong growth only 60 cents of every one
hundred dollars of increased wealth went to poverty reduction. There has been
criminal neglect of the poor. Prosperous nations must upgrade rather than destroy health care,
unemployment, disability and all other important wealth redistribution programs.
These programs must be transplanted to all other nations as an important part of
world development. Foreign aid has to be focused on the world's poor. A bill
just passed in Canada does that and all nations need mechanisms to insure that
their aid is not being used to prop up dictators or advance wasteful projects.
The remaining wealthy national governments like
Canada have to donate a lot more in food, water and sanitation relief. There is
no immediate cure for world structural problems in finance. As the US Federal
Reserve continues to lower rates and send the dollar on a downward spiral, food
costs rise and rise more as big investors funnel money into energy and food
basics that will retain their value. We first have to lobby our governments to
donate much more, and to get to work with ideas to fix the structural problems
that have caused a famine when there is plenty of food. Regulation is needed in
all areas. It is a fact that deregulation, that first came on strong during the
Reagan years, has led to wealth concentration at the top. Many nations suffer
from government that is not accountable and under the sway of an agribusiness
lobby that spends huge sums to gain legislation and trade agreements that enrich
corporations and starve human beings.
New Taxes:
Let’s start with taxing bio fuels and stopping the promotion of them. Bio
fuels do not halt global warming and studies have shown that. Producing them
increases emissions and what bio fuels do is
turn grain into fuel instead of food. One third
of the US corn crop is now feeding cars instead of people. We also have to start realizing that
driving is a luxury and not a right. Autos and trucks have been guzzling cheap
fuel for too long. The time for personal sacrifice is here. China alone plans to
put 300 million vehicles on its roads by 2030. Obviously the world can't sustain
this and the point has been reached where every person driving is killing others
for the sake of personal luxury. 75 to 90 percent of personal emissions come
from auto use. It's time to end auto addiction. The auto industry has to be hit
hard and forced to produce small fuel efficient, low emissions vehicles.
Especially electric vehicles, which they have worked so hard to prevent.
A world wide (hunger or humanitarian) tax on oil and oil based products could be funneled directly
into efforts to end world hunger. We could steeply tax coal and all harmful
energy sources. There could be small sister taxes on consumer goods in the
wealthy nations, and on luxury and sin items like tobacco. Again the money could
be sent directly into food aid or agricultural support for small third world
farmers. Currently the
Venezuelan government wants Latin American energy-rich countries to create an
oil-for-food fund for regional development. This fund would be of enormous
help to food-poor nations in the region.
We need regulated financial support to guarantee liquidity in vital food
and water/sanitation industries. This means that low interest money will be
there for companies and nations investing to provide world food and water.
Government and UN monies must also be there to aid in providing world wide
sanitation without profit.
Create
legislation to end dumping and plowing under and create a guaranteed
international market for all grain and food production. A Grow if you Can Grow
morality, and if prices are low, allow a subsidy that will cover the farmer’s
needs and ensure that the food is shipped to those most in need. End Free
Trade laws that stop nations from stockpiling food. Strategic grain reserves
will allow nations a buffer to weather famine and price shocks.
Free Trade practices that were supposed improve our
lot have created artificial famines. One good example is Mexico where trade
policies instituted by the IMF and World bank created poverty, high prices and
shortages. Small Mexican farmers were put out of business and subsidized US corn
flowed in. Free Trade laws shut down the Mexican marketing agency and large
companies like Cargil monopolized corn and grain movement. Mexican farmers then
flooded into the US as illegal immigrants.
Similar policies by the WTO/IMF
caused the rice crisis in nations like the Philippines. The combined impact of
forced debt repayment and trade liberalization damaged the agricultural sector.
Ironically these policies were supposed to bring prosperity and employment.
World wide, free trade policies have killed off small farming and national food
self-sufficiency, turning nations into food importers. And that food is under
the control of agribusiness giants. In India the problem is so severe 150,000
farmers have committed suicide. It appears that free trade has been effective
in killing off local peasants and farmers, while leaving whole populations
reliant on imported grains and meat parts. Much of this coming from subsidized
farming in the USA and EU
In short the world has become dependant on globalized
capitalist agribusiness and large scale GMO farming. Which is a very bad
situation, because the increasingly greedy giants pillage for profits. If this
situation is not changed and the giants fail in production, world wide
starvation will arrive.
Alternate foods are another idea. Some nations may
have to make dietary changes. Foods that are abundant can be delivered to the world's poorest. An example
would be that those without rice could receive Canadian potatoes or some other
staple. Flexibility in forms of food aid would make a
difference.
Clean water should not only be a human right, water should be kept in the
public domain to keep corporations from killing people with thirst and slowing
food production with steep water delivery fees. Corporations profiting from
spreading thirst and hunger stand with war mongers as the evilest people on
earth. Eco damage and development also leads to water shortages, meaning a
world wide green plan to protect eco systems, ensure sustainable development and
repair environmental damage is needed. Threatened rainforests and other vital
eco systems must be protected. Currently one in five people lack clean
water.
We must continue the battle against climate change and initiate new
global planning to deal with food production in the face of climate change that
is already here and doing damage.
Dumped or waste food is an eco threat.
In the US 40 to 50 percent of food grown for harvest never
gets eaten. Decaying and dumped food ends up as methane, a harmful greenhouse
gas.
There should be micro local solutions, meaning an end to waste as there
is enormous food waste in the wealthy nations. In the UK a study showed that 30
to 40 percent of food ends up as waste. Another study showed 38 billion dollars
worth of food gets tossed yearly. This sum is greater than the economies of most
nations. We need more programs to aid
local farmers to bring us food that is close to home and close to the heart. And
also a plan so food banks will get surplus or unsold food from restaurants and
food rich organizations to the poor instead of into garbage bins or buckets of
swine slop. One in five Americans relies on some
sort of food aid. Nine percent of Canadians rely on food bank assistance and the
startling fact has been that Ontario, during its years as the richest province,
had the most hungry people. There is no excuse for poverty in rich nations as
wealth redistribution is simple. Benefits for the unemployed, disabled and lowest
paid workers can be easily improved through redistribution plans to tax
the rich and corporations. The fact that this hasn't been done on a large enough
scale shows us that democratic politicians are basking in false glory instead of the
truth of their failure.
Health ... the cost to nations is enormous.
Eliminating hunger, especially child hunger is a money saver and economy
booster. Properly fed people don't create an incredibly costly health care
burden. What they do create is a robust economy. The costs of letting the rich
get ever richer at the expense of everyone else are world shaking. Wealthy
people are the most in need of education. They need to understand that their
short term greed and lobbying efforts to perpetuate such systems have driven the
planet into poverty.
Let’s turn our
swords into plows. Let’s stop the arms race and turn it into a positive venture.
Offer large government subsidies for arms companies that will switch to
producing farm equipment and farm aid for small farmers. Instead of instruments
of human destruction we’d have instruments of public health.
We have to return to a peace economy from a war economy and invest in a Green Rush.
A
return to small local farming and a sustainable environment is the way to do it.
The promotion of
vegan and vegetarian diets can free up large quantities of grain. This grain can
be used to produce food for the world’s poor. Meat production sucks up too much
grain. The EU imports animal feed and 70 percent of it comes from poor nations
where people are starving. It can take up to 10 plant calories to deliver 1 meat
calorie. Factory farming is another horror with animals kept in cramped and
unsanitary conditions. Risks from this cruel method of farming include
salmonella, BSE, bird flu and antibiotic resistance. Other known risks to humans
are heart disease and cancer. Meat eating is no longer ethical. This brings us to education as anti
hunger and planet/people saving knowledge has to be in the forefront world wide.
World wide land rights legislation (enforced locally or at the UN level)
is needed to prevent indigenous peoples and small farmers from losing their land
to gobbling multinationals and governments. We also need worldwide soil
protection laws to prevent the loss of valuable soil.
Overfishing in all eco systems has to be prevented as it has and will bring
about catastrophe. Free Trade laws have done much to discourage local food
production in Africa. We have to reverse the trend and change these laws. Plus
aid has to be more than shipping in food basics. There has to be education and
empowerment of local people, and investment in local agricultural systems and
sanitation.
It is a fact that multi national corporations tied to the House of
Windsor control most of the food supply. Let’s take a share of their profits
with new distribution taxes. Huge companies like Cargill are profiting immensely
from current problems. Controlling eighty percent of the world’s grain
shipments means you have to pay for that privilege or divest yourself of it.
Make it international law and guarantee a percentage of shipments to those in
need of food. Tax all the big food monopolies and directly redistribute the
wealth as food production aid to the world’s poor.
How about new humane international regulations preventing speculators
from enriching themselves through food and oil price manipulation. The US House
of Representatives is currently conducting hearings on energy market
speculation. Hedge funds and investment banks have been playing a key role in
driving up energy costs. We also need to
reorganize the IMF and World Bank into organizations that work to end world
hunger rather than create it. These failed instruments of disastrous neo liberal
free trade policies need to be reborn.
We need a UN ordered world wide ban on all sweat shop goods, where it
can be demonstrated that the workers are not being paid a living wage.
Many workers in the wealthy nations are not receiving a living wage; the
movement for a Living Wage must become a world wide movement.
Global slavery is another ugly problem. It is estimated
that 27 million people are slaves. They live in places as far apart as
Mexico
and the Ivory Coast.
The
International Labor Organization says they produce yearly profits of around $31
billion.
Let’s boost small organic farming as that is where the growth potential
is in healthy food production. It is the better option. We must restore national
food sovereignty, allowing nations to opt out of free trade regimes when food
production is endangered. Otherwise we are relying
on large scale international GMO farming or farming that needs large quantities of oil based
fertilizers.
More green and energy efficient replacement technologies
must be put in place to offset oil use. Large scale agriculture and processed
food production runs on oil. Oil is used at all stages: plowing, fertilizing,
harvesting, pest reduction, shipping, refrigerating and cooking.
For an end, let’s make healthy reproducing seed freely available world
wide. End the TRIPs madness that allows corporations to patent plant seeds. Let all nations work on expanding the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization's plan to provide seeds to farmers in poor nations. Aid in
providing fertilizer and energy is also needed as part of the plan both globally
and locally. Food must be
considered a human right along with clean water, sanitation, housing and all
those items available in that hoped for grocery store of human kindness.
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