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Bush Talking through his Hat
Thesynergyonline, May
05, 2008
The US President George W. Bush’s
remarks that food prices are going up due to the high middle class
consumption in India is as asinine as he is incomprehensible.
In a statement released here ,
Pradeep S Mehta, Secretary General and Siddarth Mitra, Research
Director of CUTS International, a leading economic policy research
and advocacy group said that the George Bush is well known for
talking through his hat, and his remarks on India being the cause
for high food prices reflects his utter lack of intelligence, poor
understanding of economics, and sheer ignorance of basic statistics
on food consumption.
“The average American’s food
consumption in calories is 50 percent more than the average
Indian’s; in addition it is still increasing over time and a rate
which is faster than that of half starved India . The current
average American intake of 3770 calories, a figure provided by the
FAO Statistical Yearbook, is the maintenance diet of a sedentary
person weighing 114 kilograms” say Mehta and Mitra. Indians, on the
other hand, still consume only 2440 calories per capita – just
enough to support a much leaner 74 kgs.
Clearly, the food problem has been
created by Americans; if all of them were to come down to even the
middle class weight in India many hungry people in Sub-Saharan
Africa would find more food on their plates. On top of that,
resource draining liposuctions would no longer be necessary; the
money instead can go to famine victims in Somalia and Ethiopia . The
loss of obesity would also probably make Americans look at the
outside world with a less jaundiced and more benevolent eye.
Apart from the exploding problem of
over consumption, rising food prices have been caused by the sudden
shrinkage of food supply to the developing world by the developed
countries who have been trying to sustain their unsustainable fuel
guzzling life styles by trying to grow oil on plants and trees
instead of food, thus suddenly short-circuiting the food supply in
the international market.
“The harping on more consumptive
lifestyles in India and China is nothing but a ploy to divert
attention from their complicity in engineering food shortages and
price spirals”, said Mr Mehta.
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