US Is behind Global Food Crisis

Published in Guangming Daily
(China) on 9 September 2022
by Xiong Maoling (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Jo Sharp. Edited by Patricia Simoni.
In recent years the global food market has sustained a massive shock as a result of COVID-19, supply chain disruption, extreme weather, international turmoil and other factors. The prices of staple crops have risen sharply and food shortages have appeared in many parts of the world. The United Nations, the World Bank and other international agencies have warned, “It’s the story that keeps getting from bad to worse,” and the world may be facing “the worst humanitarian crisis since the end of the second world war.” Meanwhile the U.S., the architect and driving force behind the Ukraine crisis, is reaping the benefits. Several major U.S. agriculture giants are making a fortune out of the food crisis.

The Growing Food Crisis

At present, global food supply chains are under assault, international food prices are soaring, many low-income countries are struggling and the number of hungry people is rising. Both Ukraine and Russia are major grain exporters and Russia is also a leading fertilizer exporter. The escalating crisis in Ukraine and Western sanctions against Russia have pushed up the cost of fertilizer, leading to higher food prices.

According to data released by the U.N. World Food Program, the number of people facing severe food insecurity globally has more than doubled since 2019 to 345 million, and more than $22 billion is expected to be needed in 2022 to meet emergency requirements. A spokesperson for the agency pointed out that the current food crisis is unprecedented, with the four major factors being regional conflict, climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic and rising prices. Since the escalation of the crisis in Ukraine, access to food has become extremely difficult for many people in the “global south.”

President of the World Bank David Malpass said in April that the crisis in Ukraine had pushed up global food prices, hitting the poorest people the hardest. According to World Bank estimates, for every percentage point increase in food prices, 10 million people around the world will fall into extreme poverty.

In addition, the rise in energy prices affects transportation and production, also contributing somewhat to higher food prices and exacerbated the food crisis. Maximo Torero, chief economist at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, recently said that if the Ukraine crisis continues, Russia and Ukraine may significantly reduce exports of wheat, corn, fertilizers and other products this year and next. Soaring prices of fertilizers and other products will make them unaffordable for many farmers in other regions and will affect yields and drive food prices higher.

The ‘Driving Force’ of the United States is to Blame

The situation in Ukraine is a major reason for the current food emergency, and the United States is to blame for “pouring fuel on the fire” of the crisis. The U.S. and its allies have imposed extreme sanctions on Russia, aggravating obstructions in the global supply chain, already affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, and leading to soaring international food and energy prices.

According to the West’s narrative, the food crisis is specifically blamed on Russia’s military action against Ukraine. However, analysts have pointed out that the situation in Ukraine has developed to where it is today because of the United States constantly squeezing Russia’s strategic space in a quest to assert its own dominance.

The U.S. Treasury Department released a document in July, claiming that Russian agricultural products, agricultural equipment and medicines were not covered by U.S. sanctions and that the U.S. supported efforts to reduce global food shortages. However, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pointed out at the end of July that the U.S. promise to apply exemptions to Russian food supplies was unfulfilled. Russia is a major grain exporter and the current food crisis has been exacerbated by sanctions affecting Russian exports. U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres has recently called for unfettered access to global food and fertilizer markets for Russia.

Those ‘Behind the Scenes’ Reap the Benefits

The U.S. has been behind every global food crisis since World War II. A few countries, such as the United States, have manipulated the system of global trade in food, built up dominance and repeatedly made huge profits from food crises.

Analysis released by the Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health notes that in the 1950s, with prompting from the U.S. government, agriculture in the U.S. began to merge and integrate, eventually industrializing and forming a number of large multinational enterprises involved in seeds, fertilizers, food processing, the grain trade and so on. Through these corporations the United States has locked in its dominance of the global food system.

Of the four giants controlling the world’s grain trade — namely ADM, Bunge, Cargill and Louis Dreyfus — the first three are U.S. companies. U.S. agricultural giant Monsanto controls a significant portion of seed production. In a study of the global food crisis of 2008, the academic Eric Holt-Giménez pointed out that in the final quarter of 2007, even as the crisis was unfolding, ADM’s profits went up by 20%, Monsanto’s increased by 45% and Cargill’s rose by 60%.

Today, these companies are taking advantage of the Ukraine situation to make a fortune. According to reports, the share prices of ADM and Bunge have risen sharply with the escalation of the Ukraine crisis, with ADM’s shares rising 27% since the start of the year. British newspaper The Guardian reported in May that the wealth of billionaires in the food and energy sectors has grown significantly in the past two years because of a surge in commodity prices caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the Ukraine crisis. For example, the Cargill family now has 12 family members who are billionaires, up from eight before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Danny Sriskandarajah, the chief executive of Oxfam GB, commented that it was morally indefensible that people are dying of hunger in East Africa while the wealth of the world’s super-rich was growing as a result of soaring food and energy prices.


 近年来,受新冠疫情、供应链受阻、极端天气、国际局势动荡等影响,全球粮食市场遭受巨大冲击,主要作物价格急剧上涨,全球多地出现粮食短缺状况。联合国、世界银行等国际机构对此发出警告,“情况正从糟糕走向更糟糕”,世界或将面临“二战后最严峻的人道危机”。

与此同时,乌克兰危机的始作俑者和幕后推手美国坐收渔利,美国几大农业巨头正从粮食危机中大发横财。

粮食危机不断加剧
当前,全球粮食供应链受到冲击,国际粮食价格飙升,很多低收入国家陷入困境,饥饿人口不断增加。乌克兰和俄罗斯都是主要粮食出口国,俄罗斯还是主要化肥出口国,乌克兰危机升级以及西方对俄制裁推升化肥成本,导致更高的粮食价格。

联合国世界粮食计划署日前发布的数据显示,自2019年以来,全球面临严重粮食短缺的人数增加了一倍多,达到3.45亿人,预计2022年需要超过220亿美元资金来应对紧急需求。该机构发言人指出,当前粮食危机是前所未有的,地区动荡、气候变化、新冠疫情和价格上涨是四大诱因。自乌克兰危机升级以来,对“南方世界”许多民众来说,获得粮食已变得极为困难。

世界银行行长马尔帕斯今年4月曾表示,乌克兰危机推高了全球粮食价格,最贫困人群遭受的打击最大。据世界银行估算,粮食价格每上涨一个百分点,全世界就将有1000万人陷入极端贫困中。

另外,能源价格上涨影响到运输、生产等环节,也在一定程度上导致食品价格攀升,加剧了粮食危机。联合国粮农组织首席经济学家马克西莫·托雷罗日前表示,如果乌克兰危机持续,今明两年俄乌或将大幅减少小麦、玉米、化肥等产品的出口。化肥等价格飙升会让其他地区很多农民负担不起,也将影响收成,刺激粮食价格上涨。

美国“拱火”难辞其咎
乌克兰危机是当前全球粮食危机的一个重要原因,而在危机中“拱火浇油”的美国难辞其咎。美国及其盟友对俄罗斯发起极限制裁,令本已受到新冠疫情影响的全球供应链“梗阻”愈发严重,导致国际粮食和能源价格飙升。

在西方叙事中,粮食危机被归咎于俄罗斯对乌克兰的特别军事行动。但分析人士指出,乌克兰局势发展到今天的地步,是美国为谋求自身霸权不断挤压俄罗斯战略空间导致的恶果。

尽管美国财政部今年7月发布文件声称,俄罗斯农产品、农业设备和药品不在美方制裁范围内,美方支持缓解全球粮食短缺的努力,但俄外长拉夫罗夫7月底指出,美国对俄粮食供应实行相关豁免的承诺并未兑现。粮食出口大国俄罗斯因制裁影响粮食出口,进一步恶化了当前的粮食危机。联合国秘书长古特雷斯日前也呼吁,应确保俄粮食和化肥不受阻碍地进入全球市场。

“幕后黑手”坐收渔利
二战后历次全球粮食危机背后都有美国的影子。美国等少数国家操纵全球粮食贸易体系,构建起粮食霸权,屡屡在粮食危机中谋取巨额利润。

美国约翰斯·霍普金斯大学公共健康学院发布的一篇分析文章指出,20世纪50年代,在美国政府推动下,美国农业开始兼并整合,最终实现农业工业化,并形成了一批大型跨国企业,涉及种子、化肥、粮食加工、粮食贸易等方面。通过这些企业,美国锁定了其在全球粮食体系中的主导地位。

目前控制世界粮食贸易的四大巨头,即艾地盟公司、邦吉公司、嘉吉公司和路易达孚公司,前三家都是美国企业。美国农业巨头孟山都公司则控制着相当一部分的种子生产。美国学者埃里克·霍尔特-希门尼斯在有关2008年前后全球粮食危机的研究报告中指出,2007年第四季度,即使世界粮食危机正在发生,艾地盟的利润仍增长了20%,孟山都增长了45%,嘉吉增长了60%。

如今,这些企业又在借乌克兰危机大发横财。据报道,乌克兰危机升级后,艾地盟和邦吉的股价大幅上涨,艾地盟股价与今年年初相比已上涨约27%。英国《卫报》5月报道,由于新冠疫情、乌克兰危机带来的大宗商品价格飙升,粮食和能源领域亿万富翁的财富在过去两年显著增长,比如嘉吉目前有12名家族成员成为亿万富翁,而新冠疫情前则是8人。

英国乐施会首席执行官丹尼·斯里斯坎达拉贾评论,东非人民正死于饥饿,而世界超级富豪的财富因却飞涨的食品和能源价格增长,这在道德上是站不住脚的。
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