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Perspectives on the international relations of food

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

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The international system of production, distribution and consumption of food is managed by states, corporations and international organizations. International organizations play minor roles in the food regime, principally as arenas for policy coordination among state bureaucracies and as agents for modest multilateral programs. All of these actors work within the framework of a set of norms, rules and practices that constitutes a global food regime. Currently, the regime is undergoing change. Growing demand for food, tighter connections among markets, and greater reliance on technology have increased the importance of international adjustments. American preponderance in shaping regime features and insuring food security through reserves has declined. The dramatic price rises and rationing of international food supplies that occurred during the “crisis” of 1973–74 exposed serious deficiencies in the existing regime. At least five world food problems—potential shortages, instability, insecurity, low productivity and malnutrition—continue as real or potential threats. To solve these problems the norms of the current regime that has existed since World War II are seriously under challenge. Re-evaluation and reform of the major principles characterizing the food regime are needed.

Type
Section I Overview
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1978

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References

1 This paper is adapted from revised versions of “Global Food Regimes: Overcoming Hunger and Poverty,” prepared by Raymond Hopkins for the 1980s Project of the Council on Foreign Relations. The authors wish to thank Edwin Martin, Lyle Schertz, Dale Hathaway, I. M. Destler, Eugene Skolnikoff, Hayward Alker, Lawrence Krause, and a host of other food experts and CFR staff members for their insights and comments offered during various phases of the preparation of this chapter.

2 Mair, Lucy, Primitive Government (Baltimore: Penguin, 1962)Google Scholar; Wittfogel, Karl A., Oriental Despotism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1957)Google Scholar.

3 FAO, FAO Commodity Review and Outlook 1975–76 (FAO: Rome, 1976), pp. 89Google Scholar.

4 See USDA, The World Food Situation and Prospects to 1985 (Washington: United States Department of Agriculture, 1974)Google Scholar, and Brown, Lester, “The World Food Prospect,” Science (12 12, 1975): 1053–59Google Scholar.

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6 Ibid., p. 13.

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9 FAO, p. 23 for production figures for 1973–74 and estimates for 1975–76.

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11 Knudsen, Odin and Parnes, Andrew, Trade Instability and Economic Development: An Emprical Study (Lexington Mass.: Lexington Books, 1975)Google Scholar. These authors point out that export instability, on balance, encourages economic development and that some degree of instability is probably desirable.

12 All USDA and FAO projections tend to agree on this point.

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14 Overconsumption is also a form of malnutrition. It is not, however, a concern of this volume.

15 See FAO, Assessment of The World Food Situation,(Rome: FAO, 1974), pp. 4950Google Scholar, and Reutlinger, Shlomo and Selowsky, Marcelo, Undernourishment and Poverty, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Bank Staff Working Paper no. 202 (Washington: IBRD, 04, 1975)Google Scholar.

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25 Under current legislation (1977), a U.S. domestic reserve of 35 million tons of grain maybe accumulated and held.

26 Jones, Joseph M., The United Nations at Work: Developing Land, Forests, Oceans and People (Oxford, England: Pergamon Press, 1965), p. 118Google Scholar.

27 See Lofchie, Michael, “Political and Economic Origins of African Hunger,” Journal of Modern African Studies (12 1975): 551567Google Scholar, and George, Susan, How the Other Half Dies (London: Penguin, 1976)Google Scholar.

28 Similarly, most poor countries have had little influence on the regime, except as their needs became so apparent as to be impossible to ignore.

29 It might also be considered to have been largely benign toward the interests of poor countries, though not necessarily poor people in these countries, except where these interests conflicted with those of the major participants in the commercial system.

30 Saleh, Abdullah A., “Disincentives to Agricultural Production in Developing Countries: A Policy Survey,” Foreign Agricultural Supplement (Washington: GAO, 03, 1975), p. 1Google Scholar.