Don't Blame the Market for the Global Food Crisis!
by
Joshua Snyder
by Joshua Snyder
DIGG THIS
"I don't want
to alarm anybody, but maybe it's time for Americans to start stockpiling
food," begins The Wall Street Journal's Brett Arends in
an article earlier this week, Load
Up the Pantry. (Yes, The Wall Street Journal!) Mr.
Arends blames "the surge in demand from China and India" and "the
growing demand for ethanol as a fuel additive." Both statements
are correct, but miss the underlying source of the crisis.
"There is
more than enough grain to feed every hungry human on the planet,
but the poor cannot compete with wealthier buyers of meat and biofuels,"
says truthout's Kelpie Wilson, also this week, in Why
More Food Is Not the Answer. Her statement is accurate, as are
the facts that "it takes about seven pounds of grain to produce
one pound of beef" and that "[t]he grain used to fill an SUV tank
with ethanol could feed one person for a year." However, in approvingly
citing a report that "indicts markets with failing to eradicate
hunger and poverty," Ms. Wilson misses the root cause of the problem.
Before we identify
that root problem, let's look at the crisis we face.
Food riots
have occurred across the globe and are threatening governments in
poor countries. Last year there were tortilla demonstrations in
Mexico and pasta demonstrations in Italy. More recently, in sub-Saharan
Africa, Egypt, and Haiti, people have taken to the streets demanding
rice. Argentina, Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan have banned the
export of wheat. Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, China, Cambodia, and
India have done the same with rice. South Korea has issued price
controls on basic foodstuffs. Japan has run out of butter, and with
wheat and barley prices skyrocketing, is resorting to government
reserves to buy grains from overseas. In the United States, Sam's
Club is rationing rice and citizens are heeding Mr. Amends' advice
and stockpiling food. It has been reported that global grain reserves
stand at eight to twelve weeks.
The root of
this crisis lies in the fact that grains are being used not to feed
people, but to feed cattle and cars. And, not surprisingly, both
ideas came from the State and have been financed with State funds,
confiscated, it goes without saying, from the citizenry.
How the Nixon
administration dealt with a similar rise in grain costs not only
informs us what approach not to take in the current crisis,
but was also the fundamental cause of the current crisis. In 1972,
it was Americans who took to the streets demanding government action
on rising grain costs, after a grain deal with the Soviet Union
fell through. Nixon's agriculture secretary, Earl Butz, was charged
with the task of reducing the cost of grains by any means necessary.
(This same
Earl Butz is the main villain of The
Unsettling of America by Wendell Berry, the 1977 classic
detailing the profound cultural consequences of Mr. Butz' imperative
for farmers to "get big or get out," which led to the death of the
family farm; State intervention, not the free market, led to the
birth of agribusiness.)
Mr. Butz engineered
a system in which massive subsidies replaced loans to American farmers,
causing grain prices to artificially plummet, giving rise to the
state-subsidized corn industrial complex. Corn cost less to buy
than it did to grow, inconceivable in a free economy. New products,
impossible if corn had been sold at its market value, were developed
to make use of the artificially low cost commodity. The ubiquitous
high fructose corn syrup replaced sugar and became the sine
qua non of the modern American diet, leading to today's "obesity
epidemic," detailed by Michael Pollan in his October 2003 article
for The New York Times, The
(Agri)Cultural Contradictions Of Obesity. Importantly to today's
crisis, corn feed became the staple for cattle, grass-eating animals
whose stomachs are not designed to eat grains. Thus, they require
massive injections of enzymes and antibiotics to be able to digest
what we force-feed them, a process whose consequences are described
in graphic detail by Corby Kummer in his May 2003 article for The
Atlantic, Back
To Grass.
Hence, we now
have a global agricultural system in which an artificial demand
for cheap corn led to an artificial dependency on it. Thus, the
"the surge in demand from China and India" mentioned by Mr. Arends
only exacerbates the problem as more folks enter the middle class
in those countries and want to eat meat on something more than an
irregular basis.
If using corn
to force-feed grazers like cattle flies in the face of reason and
sound market principles, using it to fuel cars is absurd. In essence,
ethanol is nothing more than the continuation ad absurdum
of the same policies begun in the Nixon administration as part of
its corporate welfare package to agribusiness. At least with the
above examples, corn was converted into food, or, more accurately,
"edible foodlike substances," to use Michael Pollan's phrase from
his book In
Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto. With ethanol as a
biofuel, corn is being converted into something entirely unfeasible.
"Ethanol is
so costly that it wouldn’t make it in a free market," said Walter
E. Williams in an article last month for Human Events,
Ethanol
Hoax Spreads Economic Havoc. The economic absurdity of ethanol
is made clear by the fact that "it takes more than one gallon of
fossil fuel – oil and natural gas – to produce one gallon of ethanol."
The only reason it is produced in the first place is that it is
subsidized, and subsidized heavily, with money confiscated from
citizens, while cheaper and more efficient Brazilian ethanol made
from sugar is targeted with stiff tariffs.
Ethanol, like
corn feed, creates an artificial, State-subsidized demand, which
has caused the prices of other grains to skyrocket. The United States,
once the breadbasket of the world, is still the world's major producer
and exporter of grains, and its irresponsible State corporatist
policies have thrown the world grain market out of whack. To use
an agricultural proverb, "The chickens have come to roost." Tragically,
it is the poorest of the poor in other countries, not those who
put these policies into place, who are paying the heaviest price.
The
Austrian School teaches us that State intervention in markets
leads to often unforeseen and disastrous consequences. The global
food crisis is a result of State intervention in that most vital
of markets, the grain market. We may well be headed for an unprecedented
global catastrophe.
Is
the legacy of Nixon's corporatism leading to similar results as
those of Stalin's collectivism, and bringing about an unintentional
global Holodomor?
Will Bush's insistence on making the great leap forward to biofuels
lead to a similar catastrophe as that caused by Mao's Great
Leap Forward? We pray not, but like those 20th Century
disasters, the growing 21st Century Global
Food Crisis has as its cause reckless State intervention in
the economy.
April
28, 2008
An American
Catholic son-in-law of Korea, Joshua Snyder [send
him mail] lives with his wife and two children in Pohang, where
he serves as an assistant visiting professor of English at a science
and technology university. He blogs at The
Western Confucian.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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