Revisiting the Global Food Architecture: Lessons from the 2008 Food Crisis
Published By: UNU-WIDER on eSS | Published Date: September, 27 , 2009The 2008 episode of food price explosion, political turmoil, and human suffering
revealed important flaws in the current global food architecture. This paper argues that
to safeguard the strengths of the current system, four failures in market functioning and
policymaking must be addressed. First, governments must reinvest in agriculture with a
focus on public goods and subject to increased public accountability to re-ensure the
global food supply. Second, the policy-induced link between food and fuel prices must
be broken through a revision of EU and US agro-fuel policies. Third, better sharing of
information on food stocks, stricter WTO regulation of export restrictions, and some
form of globally managed buffer stock will be minimum requirements to prevent the
resurgence of inefficient national food self-sufficiency policies. Fourth, a market-based
food security system is only sustainable given well functioning national social safety
nets. [Discussion Paper No. 2009/04]
Author(s): Luc Christiaensen | Posted on: Oct 27, 2010 | Views(797) | Download (734)