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Editorial: Food fight
www.Canadianbusiness.com,
May 29, 2008
From the June 16, 2008 issue of
Canadian Business magazine
U.S. President George W. Bush
recently sparked an international fight over fat, after attributing
global inflation in food prices to Indians’ eating more. “There are
350 million people in India who are classified as middle class. When
you start getting wealth, you start demanding better nutrition and
better food,” Bush said during a question-and-answer session in
Missouri on May 2. “Demand is high, and that causes the price to go
up.”
On one point, Bush is right.
According to a World Bank report released April 9, food prices have
risen 83% in the past three years. That has provoked riots in Asia,
price controls on tortillas in Mexico, and rationing of rice sales
in the U.S.
Pradeep S. Mehta, secretary general
of the Consumer Unity & Trust Society International, a think-tank in
India, quickly weighed in with his own analysis. The food problem
has “clearly” been created by Americans: they consume 50% more
calories than Indians do, he told the International Herald Tribune
on May 12. If Americans were more the size of an average
middle-class Indian, he added, “many hungry people in sub-Saharan
Africa would find food on their plates.”
To imply that tubby Americans or
ravenous Indians chowing their way up the food chain are somehow
responsible for inflation on the scale we now see is absurd.
However, the Bush versus Mehta fight illustrates a larger point.
Policy-makers need to think more intelligently about food and energy
policies, particularly the notion underpinning biofuel policy — that
farmland should be used to grow fuel. Both the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank have published reports that single
out biofuel policies as culprits in the spike in food prices. In
April, an expert panel commissioned by the European Union to study
the issue called for the EU to freeze its 10% biofuel quota
“immediately.”
In Canada, we’re marching in
precisely the opposite direction. The federal Conservatives plan to
spend $2.2 billion promoting biofuels over the next nine years.
Meanwhile, parliamentarians debate Bill C-33, legislation that would
mandate 5% biofuel in gasoline in Canada from 2010. It sailed
through a first vote on May 1, with support from the Bloc and the
Liberals. It awaits a final vote and Senate approval. Before it gets
there, though, policy-makers should stop to consider whether
enshrining demand for biofuels in law is any smarter than Bush’s fat
fight.
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