Ending Hunger
The scourge of hunger can be eradicated.
But there is much to be done.
by Carla Cole
One of the articles in Sustainability (IC#25) Late Spring 1990, Page 36
Copyright (c)1990, 1997 by Context Institute
Despite vast matrices of technological systems and inventions that some
hoped would banish want forever, one in five people on Earth is still chronically
hungry. Context Institute development officer Carla Cole - active in the
hunger movement for ten years and former director of the Campaign To End
Hunger - points out here that we've made great progress in spreading awareness
about hunger, but we still have a lot of work to do. The call to "feed
everyone" has to be changed to policies, programs, and practices that
allow people to feed themselves sustainably.
Prior to the national elections in November 1988, the school newspaper
Weekly Reader invited young people in grades four through eight to
send drawings and essays to the new president, giving their ideas about
America's most urgent goals. The number one issue listed was the elimination
of poverty and hunger in the world.
Ten years ago, you could scarcely find the word "hunger" in
the news. Now, many of us are deeply concerned about it. The White House
mail room reported to me that when President Bush first assumed office,
messages to him on the subject of hunger ranked second only to Social Security.
A growing hunger movement is working to keep the dimensions and ramifications
of extreme poverty in politics, in the media and on our minds.
The dimensions are horrific: 13 to 18 million human beings, the vast
majority of them small children, die of hunger and hunger-related disease
each year. These rough figures have not changed since the American hunger
movement began in the mid-to-late 1970s (with the work of Frances Moore
Lappé, Harry Chapin, and Keith Blume, among others).
The ramifications affect virtually everyone. Poor people, shoved onto
marginal land, devastate their environments seeking food and fuel. They
have many children, knowing that many will surely die. They are a restive,
manipulable political non-force, the presence of which is frequently associated
with war. Military experts at the Center for Defense Information, even before
the demise of the Cold War, noted that an escalating conflict in the Third
World was the most likely scenario for the use of nuclear weapons.
Yet, as one who placed public service announcements about hunger on national
television for almost two years, and who had a toll-free line on which the
public could respond, I am clear that the problem is widely misunderstood.
And the organizations and individuals working to end hunger are by no means
in agreement on solutions.
To report on what I believe are the humane and sustainable solutions
to the chronic hunger that afflicts at least one billion human beings, I
can do no better than to begin by quoting David Korten of The People-Centered
Development Forum:
The critical [economic, social and political] development issue for
the 1990s is not growth. It is transformation. Our collective future depends
on achieving a transformation of our institutions, our technology, our
values, and our behavior consistent with our ecological and social realities.
This transformation must address three basic needs of our global society:
Justice. Current [economic growth-centered] development practice
supports an imbalance between over- and under-consumers of the world's
resources and ecological support capability that is simply unacceptable
by any standard of human values. The transformed society must give priority
in the use of the earth's natural resources to assuring a decent human
existence for all people.
Sustainability. Current development practice supports increases
in economic output that depend on the unsustainable depletion of the earth's
natural resource base and the life support capabilities of its eco-system.
The transformed society must use the earth's resources in ways that will
assure sustainable benefits for future generations.
Inclusiveness. Current development practice systematically deprives
substantial segments of the population of the opportunity to make recognized
contributions to the improved well-being of the society. The transformed
society must assure everyone an opportunity to be a recognized and respected
contributor to family, community and society.
Ending hunger - sustainably - will require no less than this transformation.
This means that the popular notion of not feeding North American grain to
cattle (so that the surpluses can be sent to the Third World) does not serve
- first, because these surpluses are flogged from our soils through unsustainable
practices; and second, because this "solution" does not allow
the poor people of the South to be included in the provision of their own
necessities. The best efforts in ending hunger include support for localized
food production, at least on a regional basis.
Even more fundamentally, the entire colonial and post-colonial structure
of extraction of resources from the periphery for use at the centers of
industrialization will have to be dismantled. Both North and South require
more diversified economies that are both more earth-friendly and more participatory.
The modernization of agriculture and manufacture does need to be increased
to some extent in the South; but economic growth-centered development has
been focused primarily on increasing output so that exports could raise
foreign exchange to repay national debts. The realized potential of
Debt-for-Development
swaps - wherein debt owed to governments has been repaid in local currencies,
which are then contributed to specific projects (irrigation, agro-forestry,
textbooks, rural clinics, and the like) - needs to be explored for commercial
loans as well.
Future loans could be made not to nations but to people. The
"micro-enterprise"
loan, pioneered by Mohammad Yunus of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, is
a development tool which (thanks to the efforts of the hunger lobby, RESULTS)
is now funded by the U.S. government. Private efforts, such as FINCA and
ACCION, also use micro-enterprise lending - which replaces collateral with
the mutual support of individuals - as their primary development tool.
Examples of foreign assistance programs that are working for authentic
economic development - i.e., that are sustainable - are rare, however. Government
has considerable difficulty supporting social innovations that challenge
established interests - which serious social innovations usually do. Although
it is almost imposible to find anyone who is "for" hunger, it
is a mistake to assume that no one profits from it.
U.S. groups like The Center for Rural Affairs - which are primarily concerned
with the well-being of American farmers (as opposed to absentee agri-businessmen
and their allies in the grain trade) - do critical work in lobbying government.
Pressing for policies which encourage ecologically sound agricultural practices
and fair prices, these small farming organizations are in fact supporting
an end to U.S. dumping (selling abroad below the cost of production) of
agricultural surpluses. This dumping makes it impossible for farmers abroad
to develop their ability to feed their own communities. They simply cannot
compete.
I encourage people to participate with the hunger and small farm lobbies.
I've worked with RESULTS as a volunteer for years, and although there is
at present limited potential for foreign assistance to support much that
meets my own criteria for ending hunger, the possibilties to touch and even
transform individuals in government are infinite. Also, American trade policies
which disadvantage the poor might give way before a concerted citizen lobbying
effort.
Eating locally is another genuine contribution to the efforts of people
all over the world to care for themselves. If, for example, we aren't consuming
bananas and sugar cane products and cocoa, the land on which they are growing
may come to be available for food crops for local consumption.
The real beauty of the "hunger" movement is that it has found
a way to talk about poverty in a way that is minimally threatening to those
who are not poor. What is important now is that we continue to expand people's
awareness of the connections between poverty, ecological collapse and communal
violence. The hunger movement, the environmental movement, and the peace
movement should (and to some extent do) work hand in hand. Insofar as we
continue to share and cooperate, our vision of a positive future will become
reality, and the children of the world can find happier goals than merely
staying alive.
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