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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

When businesses make people starve


Dead Children Linked to Aid Policy in Africa Favoring Americans

The bag of green peas, stamped “USAID From the American People,” took more than six months to reach Haylar Ayako.

For seven of his grandchildren, that was a lifetime.

They died as the peas journeyed from North Dakota to southern Ethiopia. During that time, the American growers, processors and transporters that profit from aid shipments were fighting off a proposal before Congress to speed deliveries by buying more from foreign producers near trouble spots. As a result of legal mandates to buy U.S. goods, the world’s most generous food relief program wasn’t fast or flexible enough to feed the starving in Ethiopia’s drought-ridden South Omo region this year.

“I am so grieved that I lost those children,” said Ayako, a Bena tribesman, speaking in his local Omotic language. “They died of the food shortage.”

The dry peas Ayako took home almost eight weeks ago had traveled more than 12,000 miles (19,300 kilometers) by rail, ship and truck, starting 15 miles south of the Canadian border with their harvest in August 2007. Stops included Lake Charles, Louisiana; Djibouti, the small African country whose capital on the Gulf of Aden serves as a port for food aid; and Nazareth, Ethiopia, two hours south of Addis Ababa, the capital. Warehouse stays punctuated each leg until the peas finally arrived in the village of Shala-Luka.

A great essay from Bloomberg.com and a must-read for all those that think putting social needs into the hands of business directly translates into efficiency. Aid taking six months to reach Ethiopia because of the intervention of big business, whose primary motivations are profit rather than people. Interestingly, the true criminals in this case are not the Government, who under a proposal by Bush tried to move towards at least 25% of the food aid being locally-produced, but the big business lobbyists who moved to stop this. While the story characterises this aid as benefiting all Americans, the truth is that that it does not, the additional revenue gained from sending US-produced food only goes towards those who are siphoning off profit from the top of these companies. Like Lehman's apparent remorse for shareholders melting away in the shadow of the half a billion dollars of profits he took from the company, ADM, Cagill and Bunge do little to spread the wealth to those everyday Americans now living in Grapes of Wrath tent cities across the United States, having lost their jobs in the quest to cut down on costs by moving production off-shore and their homes through foreclosures.

International aid policies have often been devastating for developing nations, such as the IMF's knowledge of the impending 1965 Indonesian massacre (see Pilger 2001), the flooding of Uganda with American rice which undercuts those living on subsistence living, or the outrageously stupid IMF conditions for Bolivian aid in 2000 - aid in exchange for the privatisation of water in Cochabamba - which led to widespread riots (banning people below the poverty line from collecting rainwater has to be one of the most cruel policies ever).

The article goes on to detail the level of lobbying these companies do and how the donations of aid is seen as a cash cow for US industry hoping to capitalise on the poor. While some will say that these Africans are lucky to see the aid that they do, the story has a fable for us in little old New Zealand about the dangers of letting business intervene in the administration of the state. We should be seriously questioning the assumption that privatisation is the equivalent of good governance that many people have lapped up. Both state control and business control have their foibles, although certainly both approaches can learn off each other. Before we let Key privatise our prison system, our health care system and our screens, we should look at changing the guidelines that position profit as the central goal and ensure that business has learnt enough from models of state governance to be able to look after people before their pockets. Blind faith in either system is just as ideologically biased.

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14 Comments:

At 9/12/08 1:47 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Interesting post Phoebe.

Businesses are in business to make money for their shareholders - it's their whole raison d'etre and how they are judged in the market. All the ethical policies, greenwash and corporate largesse can't hide it, business decisions aren't made to do the right thing, they are made to 'increase shareholder value'.

Has the the time has come to look seriously at workers co-ops (and other forms of alternative corporate governance)? It works for Rabobank and Fonterra. Or would they be really any different?

 
At 9/12/08 4:22 pm, Blogger Phoebe Fletcher said...

Yes, I do think we need more of this debate. There are also very effective lobby groups in NZ, just look at Hide's Climate Change Commission as demonstrating the need for independent analysis. I am concerned about the level of autonomy the current Government has from commercial interests - the state and business do have very different mandates and these conflicting interests need to be recognised more than they are in current policy.

 
At 9/12/08 4:39 pm, Blogger Ayrdale said...

What a green wank. The mindless green phobia to GE is responsible for millions of deaths. Blaming capitalism for deaths from starvation is pathetic. Of course it could be done better, of course there are inefficencies, but the left needs to examine its own conscience first...

 
At 9/12/08 5:33 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hardly a green wank, Ayrdale. If you read the article even Bush, who one could hardly call green, was trying to change some of these inefficiancies but was stymied by private industry lobbyists.

 
At 9/12/08 6:01 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

It's all America's fault of course. Nothing to do with despots diverting billions in aid money to their private fortunes.

 
At 9/12/08 6:17 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hmmm no posts on how famine was caused by Green policies of moving toward ethonol based fuels instead of food production?

Yep, we're gonna take this post seriously.

 
At 9/12/08 6:33 pm, Blogger Joe W said...

mmm no posts on how famine was caused by Green policies of moving toward ethonol based fuels instead of food production?

Hogwash. Nowhere, apart from the notable use of sugar cane waste in Brazil, has the widespread use of ethanol fuel been driven by "green" initiatives. From the misuse of government subsidies that priced maize out of the food market in Texas, to a John Howard crony receiving a federal subsidy to manufacture ethanol from Australian wheat, such initiatives have been entirely profit-driven.

 
At 9/12/08 8:24 pm, Blogger Ayrdale said...

...of course they're profit driven. That's what capitalism and capitalists do; respond to the market. Who created the market for bio-fuels ?

 
At 9/12/08 9:54 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Hogwash. Nowhere, apart from the notable use of sugar cane waste in Brazil, has the widespread use of ethanol fuel been driven by "green" initiatives"

Right, it's really sickening to see denialist like PE peddle their lies and try to cover up the truth of why millions are starving. The effect of environmental policies on the food chain is well documented.

 
At 9/12/08 10:40 pm, Blogger Joe W said...

Who created the market for bio-fuels?
What, not who. The rising scarcity and cost of oil, Dumbo.

. . . it's really sickening to see denialist like PE peddle their lies and try to cover up the truth of why millions are starving.
The only thing you find sickening about any of this is the failure of your infantile concept of capitalism to compensate you for having been deceived over the existence of Santa Claus.

 
At 10/12/08 5:59 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The market for biofuels was forced onto oil companies by governments, nothing to do with scarce oil.

God how do morons like porc-epic even know how to use a computer.

 
At 10/12/08 9:33 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Really Porc you have heard of this application called google?

It allows the user to call up facts and disprove bullshit in a matter of seconds. You should try it next time to avoid embarassing yourself.

 
At 12/12/08 8:23 am, Blogger StephenR said...

Six months for aid to reach Ethiopia, and some are trying to turn divert the argument to...biofuels?! Great.

 
At 12/12/08 4:45 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I do feel sorry for them but how long has this been going on in Africa or Asia.I remember Charities about 35 years ago doing the same thing for Bangladesh and the likes. Surely with all the money given over the decades something should have been achieved. If they were given decent sex education and tried to stop bloody breeding for even 12 months things would get a lot better and I ain't the only one that thinks like this.

 

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