Resolving
the Food Crisis:
Assessing Global Policy Reforms Since 2007
GDAE-IATP Policy Report
January 2012
Timothy A. Wise and Sophia Murphy
Download
the full report.
The spikes in global food prices
in 2007-8 served as a wake-up call to the global community
on the inadequacies of our global food system. Commodity
prices doubled, the estimated number of hungry people
topped one billion, and food riots spread through
the developing world. A second price spike in 2010-11,
which drove the global food import bill for 2011 to
an estimated $1.3 trillion, only deepened the sense
that the policies and principles guiding agricultural
development and food security were deeply flawed.
How well has the international community responded
to these challenges? In this policy report from the
Global
Development and Environment Institute and the
Institute for Agriculture
and Trade Policy, Timothy A. Wise and Sophia Murphy
argue that the recent crisis has been a catalyst for
important policy reforms, but they conclude that governments
have yet to address its underlying causes. They warn
that the international community is avoiding deeper
structural reforms, leaving the world at risk of another
devastating spike in global food prices. Wise and
Murphy call for urgent attention to three issues:
- Reducing financial speculation
on commodities markets – Reforms have been
limited, leaving commodities markets prone to wide
price swings. Proposals to increase the use of food
reserves to limit volatility have been largely rejected.
- Limiting the further expansion
of crops and land dedicated to biofuels –
Over 40% of US corn now goes to ethanol production,
backed by a range of government subsidies and incentives.
Similar programs spur biofuel expansion in other
industrialized countries, contributing to the underlying
demand-growth that is driving agricultural prices
steadily upward.
- Halting ''land grabs''
– As food-producing resources become more
valuable, resource-constrained countries and speculative
investors have bought or leased millions of acres
of agricultural land in Africa and in other developing
regions. This unregulated new market compromises
the long-term food-producing capacity of developing
countries while dispossessing those who have traditionally
worked the land.
The report, ''Resolving
the Food Crisis: Assessing Global Policy Reforms Since
2007,'' is based on a comprehensive assessment
of the policies and actions taken since 2007 by four
international groups of actors: the UN, the G-20,
the World Bank and international donors. The authors
document the welcome renewal of attention to agricultural
development and to the contributions of small-scale
farmers and women. They also find encouraging signs
of improvement in the attention to environmental issues,
including climate change. But they warn that policy
reforms fall well short of what is needed to meet
the world’s current and future food needs in a sustainable
way. Wise and Murphy put the onus on rich-country
governments to take responsibility for their agricultural
policies that are contributing to the fragility and
volatility in food systems around the world and to
support the renewed interest in many developing countries
to increase agricultural development and reduce dependence
on food imports.
Download ''Resolving
the Food Crisis: Assessing Global Policy Reforms Since
2007''
Download the Executive
Summary
Read "Resolving
the Food Crisis: Global leaders fail to make crucial
reforms," an op-ed by Wise and Murphy
See an interview with the authors on Real
News Network.
Read more on GDAE’s Globalization
and Sustainable Development Program.
Read more on GDAE's work on the global
food crisis.
Read more on IATP's work on food
and agriculture.
January
19, 2012.
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