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US food aid programme criticised as 'corporate welfare' for grain giants

Two-thirds of food for the billion-dollar US food aid programme last year was bought from just three US-based multinationals.

The main beneficiaries of the programme, billed as aid to the world's poorest countries, were the highly profitable and politically powerful companies that dominate the global grain trade: ADM, Cargill and Bunge.

The Guardian has analysed and collated for the first time details of hundreds of food aid contracts awarded by the US department of agriculture (USDA) in 2010-11 to show where the money goes.

ADM, incorporated in the tax haven state of Delaware, won nearly half by volume of all the contracts to supply food for aid and was paid nearly $300m (£190m) by the US government for it. Cargill, in most years the world largest private company and still majority owned by the Cargill family, was paid $96m for food aid and was the second-largest supplier, with 16% of the contracted volume. Bunge, the US-headquartered global grain trader incorporated in the tax haven of Bermuda, comes third in the list by volume, and was paid $75m to supply food aid.

Together, these three agribusinesses sold the US government 1.2m tonnes of food, or almost 70% of the total bought.

Critics of the US system of food aid have complained for years that the programme is as much about corporate welfare for American companies as helping the hungry overseas.

Eric Munoz, agriculture policy analyst for Oxfam America, said: "This new information makes it abundantly clear that it is massive multinational firms – not rural America and not farmers – that are the direct beneficiaries of the rigged rules governing the US food aid programme.

"The more the reality of who benefits from these deals is exposed to the light of transparency and open debate, the less defensible current policy becomes," said Munoz.

A USDA spokesman defended the aid programme, however, saying it benefited 33 million people worldwide between 2009 and 2012 while supporting jobs in the US.

"Farming operations of all sizes often sell their grain or other goods to larger entities for storage and distribution (or processing in some cases), benefitting the entire value chain and US economy," he said.

But aid experts questioned whether the programme represented value for money and was the best way of feeding hungry people in poor countries.

Rob Bailey, fellow of the UK thinktank Chatham House, said: "When you have got a process as concentrated and as uncompetitive as what the Guardian analysis reveals, you would expect taxpayers to be overpaying for the services of agribusiness.

"We know only 40 cents of every taxpayer dollar goes on food itself, the rest goes into the pockets of agribusiness and the cost of freighting."

Legislation passed in the 1950s dictates how US food aid to foreign countries operates, with the vast majority of it tied so that it must be purchased, processed and shipped by American companies, even if there are cheaper alternatives. It is an approach to aid most other donor countries have abandoned, saying it raises prices, delays deliveries, damages developing countries' markets, and does little to end dependence on foreign assistance.

The European Union changed its food-aid policy in 1996, shifting to cash donations, while Canada fully "untied" its food aid budget in 2010 – a move that has been commended internationally, including by the OECD.

Some experts in the US would like to see a similar refocusing of American food aid. The US government's top development official, Raj Shah, head of the US agency for international development (USAid), warned last year that his agency was "no longer satisfied with writing big checks to big contractors and calling it development".

In January, USAid revised its purchasing rules to allow the agency to buy most goods and services from developing countries. But the bulk of US food aid, which falls under the agriculture rather than the aid budget, was not covered by these changes.

The Guardian analysis also reveals how food aid is still used to export US agricultural surpluses. The US government has said that it is no longer a surplus disposal programme and most of the commodities shipped as food aid are the major grains.

But also on the list is 80 tonnes of canned pink salmon shipped to Cambodia and Laos through a "food for education" programme, which provides food for school meals, and maternal and child nutrition projects. It was added to the list after a glut led industry groups and Alaska state officials to lobby in Washington for salmon to be added to the list of foods that were eligible.

The potato industry also hopes to raise its share of US food aid business. In 1999, the US Potato Board (USPD) launched a special initiative to get dehydrated American potatoes into the government's overseas food aid programmes. Last year the government bought 550 metric tonnes of dehydrated Idaho potatoes for shipment to Guatemala and Guinea-Bissau.

But getting on the list of eligible commodities is just the first step. The main challenge, says the USPD, is persuading non-governmental organisations to request their products. Earlier this year, the industry body brought 11 organisations to Idaho Falls, Idaho, for a special demonstration of how "dehy" potato can be used in food aid packages.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/2012/jul/18/us-multinationals-control-food-aid


Added: Jul-18-2012 Occurred On: Jul-18-2012
By: kelly110
In:
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Tags: usa, food, aid, us, corporate, welfare, agribusinesses, socialism
Marked as: approved
Views: 1447 | Comments: 19 | Votes: 1 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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  • loool,i bet that was screaming for the death of america and west.....only to be feed by us

    Posted Jul-18-2012 By 

    (5)

  • We're running unprecedented massive taxpayer debt deficits, and we're still giving away valuable goods to foreign lands? Doesn't make sense does it?

    Posted Jul-18-2012 By 

    (5)

    • @ericredbeard

      It is surplus food so it is not all that "valuable". Also, if goverment buys that surplus then there is no pressure to reduce the production (not to mention workforce) and therefore there won't be so bad shortages when bad year comes along (and therefore food prices stay low). Food aid should buy some good will around the world (not like they could pay for it). And then there are all kinds of political aspects that i don't care to mention.

      Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @Sjumppanen Smartest person on this comment board, and the least smartest goes to Stonepony. "durrrr dem towelheads be taking my wheat fur mah horse"

      Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @Sjumppanen If it's "not all that valuable", then why is the US taxpayer paying billions for it? food prices aren't "staying low", they are climbing whether we give away billions in food or not. How about you pay for all the political aspects and let the rest of us keep our money to spend on what we choose to? K?

      Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

      (0)

  • I say we cut all food aid to countries overseas. Fuck em. We have people here that are starving.

    Posted Jul-18-2012 By 

    (3)

  • Any time money is forcefully redistributed by government it is welfare.

    Posted Jul-18-2012 By 

    (3)

  • Cut all foreign aid

    Posted Jul-18-2012 By 

    (3)

    • Comment of user 'DirtyUncleBerty' has been deleted by author!
  • It takes a liberal to condemn America for feeding the hungry. We should cut aid, let France feed the world. Good luck.

    Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Bring the troops home and feed the homeless with the aid

    Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Comment of user 'DirtyUncleBerty' has been deleted by author!
  • think its not some form of kick back
    theLAB

    Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

    (0)

  • wonder how many in congress have invested in those three companies...

    Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

    (0)

  • grain has had a huge hit this year...everything is goin up in prices from this...fuel and groceries....i think i heard 22% of corn reduction due to drought...

    Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

    (0)

  • I say feed all you want,but the price of grain per bushel will now equal the price of oil per barrel.

    Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

    (0)

  • I agree...stop funding this shit...all it does it feed parasites and encourage them to breed more.

    Let nature take its course...they should have gone extinct.

    Posted Jul-19-2012 By 

    (-1)