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6 Jul 2005 13:08:40 -0000

 

Agriculture without Farmers

press-release

 

 

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

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press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

========================================================

 

 

ISIS Press Release 06/07/05

 

Agriculture without Farmers

*********************

 

The WTO and EU agricultural policies are sweeping farmers

off the land in droves and threatening world food security.

Rhea Gala

 

References to this paper are posted on ISIS members' website

 

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/AWFFull.php

 

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Farming has evolved over thousands of years with the farm as

the basic unit of local community and culture. Its practice

was shaped everywhere by geography and the creative skills

of the farmer to be optimally productive. Since the arrival

of the tractor and the industrial `green revolution' of the

1940s, small family farms have lost out to big industrial

farms, and much of the local knowledge accumulated over the

millennia has disappeared

 

 

Trade policies benefit agribusiness: Small farmers

everywhere are impoverished

 

 

In industrialized countries like the UK where the population

is largely urban, 200 000 farms have disappeared between

1966 and 1995 [1]. The annual UK Common Agricultural Policy

budget of £3bn gives 20 percent of farmers (large

agribusinesses) 80 percent of subsidies. Government figures

show that 17 000 farmers and farm-workers left the land in

the year 2003, having failed to make a living [2].

 

 

 

While only 5 percent of the population in the European Union

(EU) are still farming [3], at least half a million farm-

workers were still leaving the land annually before the EU

was enlarged by 15 new members in May 2004. It is now likely

that Poland alone will lose up to two million agricultural

livelihoods as a result of joining the EU [1]. EU figures

suggest that half of north European agriculture will

disappear within a generation [4], as it continues to be

squeezed out by the institutions that claim to give it

support.

 

 

 

In the US, between 1950 and 1999, the number of farms

decreased by 64 percent to less than two million, and farm

population has declined to less than 2 percent. Ninety

percent of agricultural output is produced by only 522 000

farms [5]. Canadian statistics similarly reveal that farm

numbers have decreased by 10 percent between the 1996 census

and 2001; there were less than 247 000 farms in the country

in 2001 [6].

 

 

 

This relentless process of consolidation drives the heart

out of the countryside, causing social and economic decay,

and replaces it with an intensive industry that cares

nothing about plant or animal diversity, quality or

compassion in farming, but is solely interested in bringing

down prices [1,7].

 

 

 

`Free trade' policies made by and for the rich countries of

the North not only destroy the livelihood of small-farmers

at home, they also encourage the dumping of subsidized goods

(selling at less than the cost of production) from the North

onto the markets of the poor South, distorting local

markets, and leaving farmers in developing countries also

unable to compete [1, 7, 8].

 

 

 

This has become a global scandal, as 75 percent of the

population in China, 77 percent in Kenya, 67 percent in

India, and 82 percent in Senegal still depend on farming for

their living [3]. These numbers are plummeting, however, as

families dispossessed of their land are driven to the

cities, where they may find themselves unable to afford to

pay for the food they used to grow.

 

 

Agribusiness degrades the environment while governments do

nothing

 

 

`Free trade' policies of World Trade Organization (WTO)

promote overproduction of agricultural commodities causing

damage to wildlife, depleting soil, water, and fossil fuels;

and at the same time compromising food quality, with

substantial repercussions on public health [1,7]. They also

greatly exacerbate global warming in many ways, not least

the millions of unnecessary food-miles added to agricultural

commodities. Professor Jules Pretty of Essex University

estimated that the total external costs for conventional

agriculture in the UK, paid for by the taxpayer, added up to

£2.34bn for the year 1996 [9].

 

 

 

The UK government remains a chief obstacle in the fight

against international poverty and environmental degradation,

despite its seemingly green credentials on climate change,

and its recent high profile in tackling poverty in Africa.

That is because the UK continues to espouse an economic

model that promotes privatisation and trade liberalisation

as the key to reducing poverty and protecting the

environment, although that model has proved to have the

opposite effects. The UK has been at the forefront of EU

efforts to push through an aggressive `free trade' agenda at

the WTO [10].

 

 

 

Transnational corporations (TNCs) have been allowed to gain

control of supply chains and exert a stranglehold on global

food security through a process of ownership of seed,

proprietary chemicals, and other inputs, as well as virtual

monopoly of food processing and retail outlets [2,7,11]. Yet

our governments are refusing to rein in the increasing power

of TNCs that have been swallowing each other up until only a

handful remain.

 

 

 

The Agreement on Agriculture of the WTO and the Common

Agricultural Policy (CAP) of the European Union are largely

responsible for precipitating this global catastrophe in our

food production system.

 

 

The Common Agricultural Policy of the European Union

 

 

When the EU introduced the CAP in the early 1960s, it struck

a deal with the US under the framework of the General

Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT) negotiations. The US

accepted the new border protection mechanisms put in place

by the EU for food, in return for a commitment by the EU to

allow unlimited import of feedstuffs from the US at zero

tariff. The EU agreed because it was still a net importer of

food and feedstuffs; but only 15 years later, the EU itself

was producing large surpluses of grain and animal products

as a direct result of this deal [12].

 

 

 

The zero tariff for feedstuffs enabled Europe's huge

surpluses of the 1970s to be dumped on developing countries,

creating a major global problem. Feedstuff imports from the

US had led directly to the industrialization of animal

production in the EU and its associated environmental

problems [12].

 

 

 

The CAP, which aimed to " ensure a fair standard of living

for the agricultural community " [2], has for many years

provided direct aid to farmers based on area, production,

and number of livestock units (animals) [13]. This policy

gave large monocultural farms enormous subsidies, caused

massive overproduction that lowered prices, drove small

farmers out, and consolidated the power of agribusiness.

TNCs have become vast selling seed, pesticide, machinery etc

to farmers at great profit, buying produce at below the

costs to farmers, and selling it on to consumers on a huge

scale and at enormous profit [7,14].

 

 

 

The CAP reform of 2003 introduces a new system of single

farm payments that `decouples' the link between support and

production. It comes into force in 2005-6 except for new

member states, and its stated aim is to ensure greater

income stability for farmers, leaving them free to decide

what they want to produce in response to demand, without

losing their entitlement [13]. However, this is not the

effect it will have.

 

 

 

Farm business consultants Andersons and the National Farm

Research Unit predict a further 30 percent decrease in

British cereal growers and another 35 percent decrease in

dairy farmers when the new single farm payments kick in.

These payments will be lower than the previous payments made

to smaller farms; yet prices for produce currently remain

near or below the cost of production [14].

 

 

 

A survey of English farmers showed that 87 percent did not

want subsidies, only a fair return on their costs of food

production. DEFRA figures showed average farm income in 2002

at £10 000; with farm-gate prices having risen just 2

percent in the last seven years. Meanwhile, supermarket

prices have risen by 21 percent, and in 2002-3, Tesco's

profits were 60 percent of total UK farming income [2].

 

 

 

CAP reform was also greeted with dismay abroad. NGOs such as

the Catholic aid agency CAFOD and Oxfam said it would mean

" dumping as usual " for developing countries [15].

 

 

CAP has positively encouraged the most senseless and

environmentally destructive " food swaps " Britain imported 61

400 tonnes of poultry meat from the Netherlands in the same

year that it exported 33 100 tonnes of poultry meat to the

Netherlands. Britain imported 240 000 tonnes of pork and 125

000 tonnes of lamb, while it exported 195 000 tonnes of pork

and 102 000 tonnes of lamb [16] In 1997, 126 million litres

of liquid milk were imported into the UK and at the same

time 270 million litres of milk were exported out of the UK.

Twenty three thousand tonnes of milk powder were imported

into the UK and 153,000 tonnes exported out [17] In 1996 the

UK imported 434 000 tonnes of apples, nearly half of which

came from outside the EU. Yet over 60 percent of the UK's

own apple orchards have been grubbed up since 1970, largely

as a result of EU subsidies [18]

 

The WTO Agreement on Agriculture

 

 

US agricultural policy has traditionally promoted cumulative

growth [19] and privatisation of seed at taxpayer's expense

[20]. That has wrung all the profit out of farming and into

trading, processing, and retailing, controlled by a few TNCs

[11,19, 21]. Research shows the share of the US agricultural

economy going to farmers declined from 41 percent in 1910 to

9 percent in 1990, while farm input and marketing

industries' shares increased by a similar amount [21].

 

 

 

As small farmers are pushed out, others enlarge their

operation, for example, in the US pig industry a quarter of

all producers went out of work between 1998 and 2000,

leaving just 50 businesses controlling 50 percent of all US

production. Yet, independent pig farmers produce more jobs,

more local retail spending, and more local per capita income

than larger corporate operations; and profits generated by

small producers (of any commodity) are more likely to remain

in the community and benefit the local economy [21].

 

 

 

As in Europe, these policies have led to low plant and

animal genetic diversity, low prices, many failing small

farms, and environmental degradation, and because they are

geared towards maximising export, similar effects are

spreading all over the world. Seventy percent of the world's

poorest people, who directly depend on the land, are forced

to compete with the rich nations [11].

 

 

 

The 1996 Freedom to Farm Bill followed by the 2002 US Farm

Bill produced a vast structural price-depressing oversupply

of major agricultural commodities in an attempt to comply

with WTO rules [19, 22]. The Agreement on Agriculture (AoA)

came out of the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on

Tariffs and Trade (GATT) negotiations between the US and the

EU (1986-94) that led to the founding of the WTO [12]. It

provides the rules governing international agricultural

trade and, by extension, agricultural production [8].

 

 

 

The AoA is based on the firm ideological belief that trade

liberalization brings net benefits to all participants. By

removing barriers to trade, regional specialization will

increase and regions will specialize in whatever their

agriculture can produce more cheaply than others. It

dictates that when products are exchanged, everybody gains

because the combined cost of production is less than if each

region had produced its own. In practical terms, this means

promoting exports and limiting the right of countries to

follow a policy of food self-sufficiency [12].

 

 

 

The aim of the AoA is to reduce the use of the following

three methods that favour domestic production

 

Border protection against imported products (the cheapest

and most widespread method used) Internal support measures

for domestic producers (mainly used by developed countries

with taxpayers money) Export subsidies (used exclusively by

developed countries) [12]

 

 

But the US negotiating position claims the right to spend

tens of billions of dollars to compensate farmers for market

failures rather than addressing those failures directly [8,

19]. In 2003, over half of the compensation went to less

than 2 percent of farmers, again benefiting only very large

businesses [23]. Furthermore, developed countries maintain

the right to continue with several forms of support that are

now illegal for any other country to introduce [12].

 

 

 

The US, with its chronic overproduction in major

commodities, always needs new export markets, and its

policies therefore affect production everywhere. For

example, rice, the staple of most of the poor nations, is

grown on around 8 000 farms in the US; half of it in

Arkansas where the biggest 332 rice farms, each over 400

hectares in size, produce more rice than all the farmers of

Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Niger, and Senegal combined

[24].

 

 

 

In 2003, the US's crop of 9m tonnes of rough rice cost

farmers $1.8bn to produce. Farmers received only $1.5bn from

rice millers, but were sustained by government subsidies,

which totalled $1.3bn. Between 2000 and 2003 it cost on

average $415 to grow and mill one tonne of white rice in the

US, but that rice was exported around the world for just

$274 per tonne and dumped on developing country markets at a

price 34% below its true cost [24].

 

 

 

Surpluses may also be designated `food aid' and monetized,

i.e., sold on the recipient country's market to generate

cash. Most US programme food aid is sold to recipient

countries through concessional financing or export credit

guarantees. The US is nearly the only country that sells

`food aid' to recipient countries; other donors give it in

grant form [25], but both strategies reduce prices both for

developing country exporters and for smallholders in

importing countries, and deepen and prolong the depression

in world market prices [24].

 

 

Current agriculture policies undermine human rights

 

 

The WTO's stated aims are to raise living standards, ensure

full employment, and raise incomes; and the AoA is

specifically meant to further the WTO's aims by

" establishing a fair and market oriented agricultural trade

system " . But a report by the Institute for Agriculture and

Trade Policy released in March 2005 accused WTO agriculture

policies of undermining human rights; by promoting a trade

liberalization agenda that overrides efforts to improve

livelihoods in four ways [26].

 

 

 

Promote the `right to export' over human rights Fail to

tackle corporate control Allow export dumping at

artificially low prices to continue Lock developing

countries into an uneven playing field

 

 

Using data from the US Department of Agriculture and the

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

(2003), the report describes how exports from US-based

global food companies were dumped onto world agricultural

markets [22].

 

 

 

Wheat exported on average 28% below cost Soybeans exported

on average 10% below cost Corn exported on average 10% below

cost Cotton exported on average 47% below cost Rice exported

on average 26% below cost

 

 

This dumping has greatly increased since the inception of

the AoA [22], and prices have dropped to new lows [12]; but

as all WTO members have ratified at least one of the

international human rights treaties, these instruments could

be used when designing trade policies [26].

 

 

The policies of international agribusiness

 

 

The laws that bind international trade derive from the

ideology of international agribusiness whose common interest

lies in opening up developing country markets. Close links

with governments and academia are exploited to persuade

policy-makers and the public that trade liberalization is

clearly in the best interest of developing countries [24].

 

 

 

Agribusiness is at the heart of creating US trade policy,

thanks to the Agricultural Technical Advisory Committees for

Trade. Members appointed in 2003 were selected, according to

former US Trade Representative Robert Zoellick [24], to

" coincide with the continuation of the Bush Administration's

aggressive push to open foreign markets to US agricultural

products.... Coordinating with our agricultural community

will continue to be important as the tempo of negotiations

for global, regional, and bilateral trade agreements

intensifies. "

 

 

 

In the US, as in many countries, there is a fast-revolving

door between top posts in agro-industry and government; and

agribusiness sits in the top ten of industry donors to

candidates and political parties in US elections,

contributing over $340m to campaign funds since 1990 [24].

 

 

Policies reinforce industrial agriculture at the expense of

sustainable agriculture

 

 

During this multinational bonanza, industrial agriculture

and its policies are placing enormous stress on the world's

small farmers and the renewable resource base, especially

water and soil. Moreover, the local knowledge and plant

genetic diversity most needed to truly sustain the world are

being lost. Recent research has demonstrated the resilience

and productivity of many traditional agricultural practices

that have withstood the test of time [7, 21,27, 28].

 

 

 

It has also documented the damage done when small, diverse

organic farms, that have only one third of the hidden costs

of non-organic agriculture [29], are pushed off the land by

distorted markets, and replaced with large monocultures

oriented towards export production [8]. But government

policies tend to emphasize a handful of major crops that

require large fertilizer and pesticide inputs, and ignore

resource conserving crop rotations for which farmers receive

no government incentives, or sustainable practices such as

growing clover or alfalfa to enhance soil fertility. They

also perpetuate chemical-intensive agriculture by funding

research on chemical fixes for agricultural problems, to the

exclusion of research on more sustainable options [21].

 

 

 

Sustainable systems are especially able to compare favorably

with conventional systems when the comparison includes a

full cost accounting of the environmental and public health

harms and benefits of each system; but these costs are

usually externalized, or paid by society rather than the

polluter [21].

 

 

 

There needs to be dedicated support for sustainable food

production by small farmers who have served us well for

thousands of years; and a curbing of the power of

multinationals who serve only themselves. In spite of spin

from politicians about `making poverty history', their trade

liberalisation policies can only continue to ruin local

economies everywhere while serving the global elites.

 

 

 

The International Commission on the Future of Food and

Agriculture suggests the following changes to agricultural

trade policy that would help make the world a much fairer

and healthier place [7]:

 

 

 

Permit tariffs and import quotas that favour subsidiarity.

This means that whenever production can be achieved by local

farmers using local resources for local consumption, all

rules and benefits should favour that option; thus

shortening the distance between production and consumption.

Trade should be confined to whatever commodities cannot be

supplied at the local level, rather than export trade being

the primary driver of production and distribution. Reverse

the present rules on intellectual property and patenting.

These strongly favour the rights of global corporations to

claim patents on medicinal plants, agricultural seeds, and

other aspects of biodiversity, even when the biological

material has been under cultivation and development by

indigenous people or community farmers for millennia.

Localize food regulations and standards. Rules that benefit

global food giants, such as irradiation, pasteurization, and

shrink-wrapping also negatively affect taste and quality;

and industrial processing has led to an increased incidence

of food poisoning and diseases in farm animals. Each nation

should be allowed to set its own high standards for food.

Allow farmer marketing/supply management boards. These let

farmers negotiate collective prices with domestic and

foreign buyers to help ensure that they receive a fair price

for their commodities. Less than two years after the North

American Free Trade Area (that dismantled the government

price regulation agencies) went into effect, Mexican

domestic corn prices fell by 48% as a flood of cheap US corn

exports entered the country. Thousands of farmers have been

forced to sell their lands Eliminate direct export subsidies

and payments for corporations. Although the WTO has

eliminated direct payment programmes for most small farmers,

they continue to allow export subsidies to agribusinesses.

For example, the US Overseas Private Investment Corporation

funded by US taxpayers, provides vital insurance to US

companies investing overseas. Even loans from the IMF to

Third World countries have been channeled into export

subsidies for US agribusiness Recognize and eliminate the

adverse effects of WTO market access rules. Countries need

new international trade rules that allow them to re-

introduce constraints and controls on their imports and

exports. These would prevent heavily subsidised Northern

exports from destroying rural communities and self-

sufficient livelihoods throughout the South. Many people now

working, for example, for poverty wages at Nike and other

global corporate subcontractors are refugees from previously

self-sufficient farming regions. Promote redistributive land

reform. The redistribution of land to landless and land-poor

rural families is a priority. This has promoted rural

welfare at different times in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and

China. Research shows that small farmers are more productive

and more efficient, and contribute more to broad-based

regional development than do the larger corporate farmers.

 

Come and have your say at our Sustainable World Conference

in Westminster, London July 14-15, 2005

 

Details: http://www.i-sis.org.uk/SWCFA.php

 

 

 

 

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