Showing posts with label Food security theat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food security theat. Show all posts

Friday, July 10, 2009

Asian rice politics eats into food security

Last year’s mythical rice crisis could increase calls to stop rice exports

Friday, Jul 10, 2009
DPA CORRESPONDENTS
"In Cambodia, Kuwaiti investors have reportedly signed 99-year leases for huge tracts of Cambodian rice farmlands to secure their own supply.

Chan Tong Yves, secretary of state for the Cambodian Ministry of Agriculture, confirmed there were plans to lease farmland to Kuwaiti investors, but would not provide specific details.

Such deals raise worries."
India has 24 million tonnes of rice in stock but still refuses to lift an export ban on the grain for fear of political repercussions at home.

Thailand has 8 million tonnes of rice waiting to be sold to buyers in Africa this month, but the government dares not release its stock for fear of accusations of corruption.

“Rice is a political commodity,” said Concepcion Calpe, senior economist and leading rice expert at the Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

“It is political from the consumers’ point of view, who want low prices, and the producers point of view, who want high prices,” she said. “Obviously, you have governments that fall because of rice.”

Rice riots are actually rather rare nowadays.

With growing affluence, the slow spread of democracy in Asia and a trend toward populist policies to win elections in the countryside, it is the foreign consumer who is more likely to bear the brunt of governments’ self-serving rice policies, as was demonstrated by the so-called “food crisis” of last year.

The seeds of that crisis arguably sprouted in Australia, which suffered drought and a diminishing wheat crop, which then affected exports to India.

Worried about diminishing wheat stocks, India slapped a ban on exports of non-Basmati rice in March last year.

Vietnam, the world’s second-biggest rice exporter after Thailand (India usually ranks third) followed suit, capping its rice exports at 3.5 million tonnes, leading to a perceived rice crisis. Rice prices tripled, peaking at US$1,100 a tonne in May last year.

In fact, there was no rice supply shortage last year. Global rice production increased 4 percent to 688 million tonnes, FAO said.

Thailand, one of the few countries in Asia that placed no export restrictions on its rice exports last year, reaped the reward.

The kingdom shipped 10 million tonnes abroad, earning 200 billion baht (US$5.6 billion) in foreign exchange.

Thailand is unique in Asia in that almost half of its local production, about 20 million tonnes of rice a year, is for export.

But this year Thailand is suffering the drawbacks of the government’s growing role in what used to be a free-market rice trade.

Since 2001, Thai governments pushing populist policies have been offering above-market prices to purchase rice from farmers as a means of bolstering local prices and farmers’ incomes, good goals in theory.

The paddy-purchase schemes, however, have been tainted by numerous corruption scandals as the government effectively monopolized the rice stocks.

Only a handful of big rice exporters have won past government auctions at prices below the market’s, a sure sign of something fishy.

“Not everybody can bid for the government rice, you have to have connections,” said Chookiat Ophaswongse, president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association.

The last auction, on 6 million tonnes of second crop paddy, has been canceled because of corruption allegations, but uncertainly about what to do now has frozen supply, even though buyers from Africa are asking for Thai rice this month.

“They can’t release it because it’s become a political hot potato,” said Nipon Poapongsakorn, president of the Thailand Research and Development Institute, a think tank.

The Democrats, who lead the current coalition government, will be accused of colluding with a corrupt bid if they release the stocks now, he said.

Hopefully, the Democrats will do away with the rice-pledging scheme altogether before they leave office and replace it with an alternative program that assures farmers a decent price for their rice, but keeps the government out of the trade.

Given such convoluted political considerations, it is understandable that some countries are worried about their food security, even if last year’s shortage was essentially an illusion.

In Cambodia, Kuwaiti investors have reportedly signed 99-year leases for huge tracts of Cambodian rice farmlands to secure their own supply.

Chan Tong Yves, secretary of state for the Cambodian Ministry of Agriculture, confirmed there were plans to lease farmland to Kuwaiti investors, but would not provide specific details.

Such deals raise worries.

“One issue is do these countries have the legal system to protect people who claim a right to the land?” the FAO’s Calpe said. “And secondly, are the governments solid enough to handle these investments in a transparent manner, beneficial to the local community?”

What would be preferable is a free rice market that works.

“If there is a proper marketing policy and the government does not intervene, there is no need for Middle Eastern investments in rice farms,” analyst Nipon said. “They don’t need to come here as long as the government keeps its hands off.”

Thursday, May 07, 2009

CAMBODIA: Food security threat as economic crisis takes hold

PHNOM PENH, 7 May 2009 (IRIN) - Coming only months after Asia's food crisis, the economic crisis has renewed food insecurity among women and children as incomes dip, even though prices have fallen, with the World Bank predicting that Cambodia will be hardest hit among Southeast Asian countries.

As of 4 May, 1kg of rice cost 2,500 riel (US$0.61), against 3,200 riel ($0.78) a year earlier, according to the Economic Institute of Cambodia.

Declining food prices are creating difficulties for farmers who need to pay off debts, raising fears that urban workers returning to the countryside will not find work in the agricultural sector.

"Back-to-back effects of, first, the high food price crisis of last year and now the economic slowdown are likely to not only create categories of new poor... but also push into deeper food insecurity the already chronically poor," Jean-Pierre de Margerie, Cambodia country representative for the UN World Food Programme (WFP), told IRIN.

"Last year, a majority of poor households facing higher food prices had to resort to very damaging coping mechanisms such as contracting new debts or even cutting back on food consumption," he added.

Acute malnutrition in poor urban children increased to 15.9 percent in 2008 from 9.6 percent in 2005, as poor families cut back on food expenditure, according to the 2008 Cambodia Anthropometrics Survey, released in February by the government.

More women are also forgoing proper nutrition and healthcare during pregnancy, raising the risk of death during childbirth, the UN said in its 8 April statement.

Five pregnant women die every day in labour, giving Cambodia one of the highest maternal mortality rates in Asia at 472 deaths per 100,000 births, according to the most recent government data from 2005.

Shrinking growth

The World Bank expects growth to shrink to minus 1 percent in 2009 - the lowest in a decade after average growth of a record 10.5 percent since 2005, mirrored in Phnom Penh's construction and property booms.

About one-third of Cambodia's 14.5 million people live below the national poverty line of $0.50, according to government statistics.

In 2009, another 200,000 people could fall below the World Bank's regional poverty line of $1.25 a day - the highest number in Southeast Asia - it announced in April.

Food insecurity and retrenchment will result in rising child malnutrition and maternal mortality rates, the UN has warned.

Falling demand for clothing from the US and European Union and dwindling foreign investment have cost at least 60,000 garment jobs nationwide and 25,000 construction jobs.

Between 80 and 85 percent of garment workers are women, according to the International Labor Organization (ILO).

"When faced with layoffs, most workers will consume much of their savings while looking for a new job," Tuomo Poutiainen, ILO's chief technical adviser in Cambodia, told IRIN.

Many will ultimately return to the countryside, he said.

Poor families will also cope by removing children from school to work and selling household assets or land, the UN warned, although it was too early to provide figures.

Joblessness could pressure women and children into sex trafficking, hindering the progress made in the past decade against sexual exploitation, the statement added.

Training schemes

To cushion these effects, the government has announced it will release $25 million to the agriculture and garment sectors for training programmes.

"The economic downtime, when people are searching for jobs, can be used to enhance their existing skills or to train on new ones that will help them find work," Poutiainen said.

"In this way Cambodia will have a much more competent and productive labour force after the downtime ends," he said.

A report by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), Sustainable Agriculture and Food Security in Asia and the Pacific, released on 24 April, recommends policymakers enact work-for-food schemes that guarantee employment, encourage poor people to grow private gardens rather than rely solely on income, and establish common property rights over water.