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criticism on food prices
Indians bristle at U.S.
criticism on food prices
Tehran Times, May 15,
2008
By Heather Timmons
Instead of blaming India and other
developing nations for the rise in food prices, Americans should
rethink their energy policy and go on a diet, say a growing number
of politicians, economists and academics in New Delhi.
Criticism of the United States has
ballooned in India recently, particularly after the Bush
administration seemed to blame India’s increasing middle class and
prosperity for rising food prices. Critics from India seem to be
asking one underlying question: “Why do Americans think they deserve
to eat more than Indians?”
The food problem has “clearly” been
created by Americans, who are eating 50 percent more calories than
the average person in India, said Pradeep Mehta, the secretary
general of CUTS Center for International Trade, Economics and
Environment, a private economic research organization based in India
with offices in Kenya, Zambia, Vietnam and Britain.
If Americans were to slim down to
even the middle-class weight in India, “many hungry people in
sub-Saharan Africa would find food on their plates,” Mehta said. The
money Americans spend on liposuction to get rid of their excess fat
could be funneled to famine victims instead, he added.
Developing nations like China and
India have long been blamed for everything from the rising cost of
commodities to global warming, because they are consuming more goods
and fuels than ever before. But Indians from the prime minister’s
office on down never fail to point out that per capita, India uses
far fewer commodities and pollutes far less than the West, and
particularly the United States.
Many Indians felt that the remarks
of President George W. Bush on May 2 were more of the same, though
this time they seemed to breed a widespread sense of “We’re not
going to take this anymore.” During a news conference in Missouri,
Bush mentioned India’s growing middle class, and said “when you
start getting wealth, you start demanding better nutrition and
better food, and so demand is high, and that causes the price to go
up.” This came on the heels of a similar statement by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice that had already upset many in India.
Americans eat an average of 3,770
calories per capita a day, the highest amount in the world,
according to data from the UN Food and Agricultural Organization,
compared to 2,440 calories in India. They are also the largest per
capita consumers in any major economy of beef, the most
energy-intensive common food source, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. The United States and Canada top the
world in oil consumption per person, according to the U.S. Energy
Information Administration.
“George Bush has never been known
for his knowledge of economics,” Jairam Ramesh, the minister of
state for commerce, told The Press Trust of India after Bush’s
remarks, which he said proved again how “comprehensively wrong” Bush
is.
“To say that demand for food in
India is causing increase in global food prices is completely
wrong,” Ramesh said.
Politicians and academics in India
cite various other reasons: diversion of arable land in the United
States and Europe into ethanol production; trade subsidies by the
United States and Europe; and the dollar’s decline.
Subsidies to Western farmers have
undercut agricultural production in fertile areas of Africa for
decades, Kamal Nath, India’s minister for commerce and industry,
said by telephone. Meanwhile, he added, Americans waste more food
than people in many other countries, in part because they buy in
such large quantities.
The United States is responsible
“many times more” than India for the world food crisis because of
its higher food consumption, said Ramesh Chand, an economist with
the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, which advises India’s
government on farming policy.
The Bush administration responded
to the criticism from India with calls for a truce. Bush is a “great
friend and admirer” of India, said David Mulford, the U.S.
ambassador to India. He added that he thought “this is a time for
increased cooperation among nations to solve this problem and that
hostile political commentary is not productive.”
A White House spokesman, Scott
Stanzel said, “We think it is a good thing countries are developing,
that more and more people have higher standards of living.”
Blaming India’s growth is not only
unfair but nonsensical, some economists argue. Food prices have not
been continually rising with the growth of the developing world,
said Ramgopal Agarwala, a former World Bank economist and senior
adviser at RIS, a think tank in New Delhi.
“They were static until 2006, then
in 2007 and 2008 there was a sudden spark,” he said. Meanwhile,
India’s boom has been happening over the past decade. This is “not
last year’s phenomena,” he said.
“I don’t know who advised the
president” on his recent comments, Agarwala said, but his analysis
is “sub-prime.”
Bush’s “ignorance on most matters
is widely known and openly acknowledged by his own countrymen,” The
Asian Age argued May 5 in an editorial, but he must not be allowed
to “get away” with an attempt to “divert global attention from the
truth by passing the buck on to India.”
Mehta said that his remarks on
liposuction were meant to be tongue in cheek but that “politically
incorrect” attitudes like Bush’s and Rice’s needed to be challenged.
Rather than blaming India, Mehta said, the West should be adjusting
to the changing world. “If the developing world is going to develop,
demand is going to go up and there are going to be new political
paradigms,” he said.
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