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CII to set up task force
The Hindu, May 05, 2008
In the wake of the rising food
prices owing to a global shortage, the Confederation of India
Industry (CII) has decided to set up a task force to chalk out steps
to raise farm production, improve productivity and encourage private
sector participation in food distribution.
In a statement here on Sunday, the
apex chamber noted that the rising food prices was a matter of
concern and called for an immediate global response by way of a
platform for dialogue and action to manage the crisis.
“The entire issue of food prices
needs to be seen in a global perspective and not just as an issue
emanating from specific countries. There is a need for greater flow
of global information on food production, consumption and reduction
in food wastage,” CII Director-General Chandrajit Banerjee said.
According to the chamber, the main
factors for the current food crisis include diversion of farm
produce to generate bio-fuels, changing weather conditions across
the globe leading to droughts and lower food production in several
countries and huge farm subsidies which encourage leaving land
fallow to maintain global prices of agricultural products.
The current crisis, the CII said,
should trigger a global discussion to build stronger information
networks on consumption and production so that corrective measures
could be taken across the globe.
The global food management system
could be developed under the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO),
it said.
Meanwhile, CUTS International, an
economic policy research and advocacy group, has criticised United
States President George Bush for his remarks on food prices going up
partly due to the rising prosperity of India’s middle class.
In a statement released here, CUTS
Secretary General Pradeep S. Mehta and Research Director Siddarth
Mitra said: “George Bush’s remarks on India being the cause for high
food prices reflects his utter lack of intelligence, poor
understanding on economics and sheer ignorance of basis statistics
on food consumption.”
“The average American’s food
consumption in calories is 50 per cent more than the average
Indian’s; in addition it is still increasing over time at 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 kg. Indians, on the other hand, still consume only 2440
calories per capita – just enough to support a much leaner 74 kg,”
they said.
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