http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5450

Food Aid Emergency

Sophia Murphy | August 7, 2008

Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco

When sudden food price increases started to make headlines last 
summer, an estimated 852 million people were already living with 
crippling hunger, which the United Nations defines as continuously 
getting too little food to maintain a healthy and minimally active 
life. The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates 
another 50 million people were added to the count in 2007. For people 
living with hunger, a long-term solution won't come quickly enough. 
Many of them will need emergency assistance. Clearly, the UN and 
donor nations need to plan and invest more strategically to ensure a 
more food-secure future.

This catastrophe took few experts by surprise. Although the world as 
a whole grows more than enough food to provide every human being with 
sufficient calories for a healthy and active life (not a fact we can 
take for granted), in many countries local food production is 
failing. Sometimes this is because food has been displaced by 
commodities used for animal feed, biofuel feedstock, or exports 
destined to feed richer people elsewhere. Sometimes it's because 
decades of neglect have left water and soil resources depleted, roads 
and storage bins in disrepair, and rural credit schemes unfunded. The 
intergovernmental report from the International Assessment of 
Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development 
(IAASTD), released in April, points out that global agriculture is in 
a deep crisis that will take hard work, significant investments, and 
new ways of measuring progress to fix.

Even the World Bank's World Development Report 2008 highlighted the 
neglect of agriculture in the last 30 years of development spending 
and the myriad problems this neglect had created. (The World Bank 
actually accepted some small measure of the blame for this neglect).

Food Aid Decline

Governments call upon agencies such as the United Nations World Food 
Programme (WFP) to address a growing number of emergencies, yet food 
aid programs have been suffering neglect, too. Food aid donations 
have fallen sharply while the number of people facing acute need in 
emergencies of different kinds has increased. Food aid deliveries in 
2007 reached their lowest level since 1961. Food aid deliveries have 
decreased almost continuously since 1999, when they stood at 15 
million tons. Only 5.9 million tons of food aid was delivered last 
year.

Today, with food and energy prices so much higher than they have been 
for the past decades, this collapse in food aid donations has even 
more serious consequences: the WFP says that its costs of providing 
food aid have increased by 55% over the last year. The UN's Emergency 
Relief Coordinator, John Holmes, told Reuters recently that $2.9 
billion had been raised to tackle the food crisis so far this year, 
less than half of what is needed just for the most severely affected 
countries.

Cold War Roots

North America began distributing food aid in the 1950s. It provided a 
way to managing unwanted commodity surpluses in Canada and the United 
States, and governments used it to buy goodwill, especially from 
countries thought to be strategic in the Cold War. The United States 
was unabashed in its use of food aid for political ends. The desire 
to create future commercial markets by changing local tastes and 
preferences was explicitly written into the legislation.

Food aid has changed. Experts' understanding of hunger, and thus of 
the priorities for interventions, has evolved. The practice of food 
aid has improved markedly. Over time, some consensus has emerged on 
the best way to use food as a development tool.

Four key adjectives describe this consensus of best practice food 
aid: targeted, untied, cash-based, and timely. Targeting is important 
to make sure the food gets to the people who need it most. Untied 
means agencies can source the food aid in the best (cheapest and most 
developmentally appropriate) market rather than only in the donor 
country. A cash-based system is more flexible than using in-kind 
commodities and facilitates local and regional purchases. Finally, 
timely means avoiding food aid that comes too late and depresses 
demand for local producers, worsening the crisis the aid was intended 
to alleviate.

Untimely, Monetized U.S. Aid

The United States, donor of half the world's food aid, hasn't joined 
this consensus. The majority of its food aid programs fail to merit 
one or more of these four adjectives. For instance, the United States 
still sells food aid to governments, who then sell or distribute the 
food in local markets. This practice has been dropped by all other 
major donors (and most minor ones) because it is grossly inefficient 
and not remotely targeted to need. It also disrupts commercial 
markets, for both local producers and importers. Washington also 
continues to insist that most of its food aid be procured, processed, 
bagged, and shipped in the United States using U.S. firms. U.S. food 
aid thus costs on average twice what EU food aid costs to deliver. It 
also means U.S. food aid takes an average of five months to arrive, 
making it anything but timely.

Another practice unique to the United States and highly criticized by 
the food aid community is called monetization: the sale of food aid 
to generate cash for development projects. Sometimes the monetization 
is tied directly to food aid projects and the cash generated is spent 
on the costs associated with food aid delivery. Too often, however, 
the money is used for more general development projects. Monetization 
increases volatility in local markets and can cause abrupt, if 
temporary, price falls. While on a different scale and easier to 
target, the monetization of development food aid (the practice hardly 
exists for emergency food aid) is little different in effect from the 
program food aid that the United States has all but abandoned: it 
displaces commercial sales for local farmers as well as rival 
importers. These market conditions discourage local production: 
exactly the opposite of what is needed to meet the underlying purpose 
of all development assistance: the reduction of poverty. Livelihoods, 
food security, and rural development all depend on stimulating 
increased production in food aid recipient countries.

Farm Bill

The Bush administration has been trying to do something about bad 
U.S. food aid practices. In 2005, the administration proposed 
designating an additional $300 million for food aid purchased from 
local or regional sources. Congress rejected the proposal. In the 
negotiations over the 2008 Farm Bill, the administration proposed a 
$350 million pilot project for local purchases over four years. 
Congress authorized only $60 million (a paltry $15 million per year). 
This compares to a total U.S. food aid budget in 2007 of $1.6 billion.

To date, the U.S. response to the emergency appeal from the UN has 
consisted of $200 million in food from the Bill Emerson Humanitarian 
Trust, a grain reserve managed for the government by private storage 
and warehouse firms. Up to four million metric tons of U.S. wheat, 
corn, sorghum and rice can be kept in the reserve, and up to 500,000 
metric tons can be released a year. The food is intended for 
emergencies when the domestic supply might not be sufficient to meet 
demands for food aid. This donation is in addition to the $1.5 
billion provided for "food aid and related expenses" so far in fiscal 
year 2008. The government asked Congress for an additional $770 
million on May 1 and is still awaiting a response.

The food price crisis has made demand more acute and supplies even 
scarcer, but it hasn't really changed the underlying problems with 
food aid as a response to hunger. A strong multilateral framework 
that allows countries - recipients and donors - as well as 
multilateral agencies and NGOs to respond to crises is vital. Funding 
that system is also vital: triage with human life is unacceptable. 
But food aid funding will be wasted if communities and governments do 
not also invest in resilient and productive agriculture in every 
corner of the globe.

A Sensible Response

The only sensible response to the mounting numbers of emergencies is 
to match emergency donations, dollar for dollar or better, with 
investments in the long-term capacity of agriculture to provide us 
with the food, feed, and fiber we need. These longer-term investments 
must go to publicly held food reserves, investment in sustainable 
technologies, vast improvements in water management, investment in 
roads, storage, communications, and other infrastructure.

The principle framework for the food aid system is the Food Aid 
Convention (FAC). The FAC is the framework used by most food aid 
donors. For all food aid donors except the United States, the FAC 
provides the framework for all their donations. The FAC sets 
disciplines on food aid donors that would constrain U.S. food aid 
policy, so although the U.S. is a party to the FAC, it does not 
commit all of its food aid under the FAC's auspices. FAC donations 
are made in volume, not monetary terms, which gives recipients some 
guarantee that they will get the food they need even when prices are 
high and food aid is scarcer.

The Food Aid Convention expired last year and is overdue for 
renegotiation. It needs some important reforms to provide a stronger 
and more effective basis for multilateral cooperation on food aid 
(see Renegotiating the Food Aid Convention, a recent discussion paper 
by the International Food Policy Research Institute's John Hoddinott 
and Marc J. Cohen). U.S. leadership, in showing at least good faith 
efforts to end the most damaging of U.S. food aid practices, would 
contribute significantly to the overall multilateral effort required 
to strengthen this small but vital part of the global food security 
net.

Hunger isn't inevitable. In the 21st century, the world grows enough 
food, knows enough about redistributive economics, has the political 
tools to ensure inclusive decision-making, and can afford to provide 
the basic needs that protect every person's right to an adequate, 
nutritious diet. To realize this hope will take change. Not just in 
the countries where hunger is so prevalent, but also in rich 
countries, where waste of all kinds - of food, of energy, of natural 
resources - is compromising everyone's survival.


Sophia Murphy, a Foreign Policy In Focus contributor, is a senior 
advisor at the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP).


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