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International Food Policy Research Institute
sustainable solutions for ending hunger and poverty
Policy Seminar
High Food Prices
The What, Who and How of Proposed Policy Actions
Presenters: Joachim von Braun, Mark Rosegrant, Maximo Torero, and John Hoddinott
Location:
International Food Policy Research Institute
2033 K Street, NW, Washington, DC
Fourth Floor Conference Facility
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
3:30-5:00 pm


Presentation
Summary

Joachim von Braun, director general of IFPRI, launched the policy seminar by stating that both supply and demand factors are contributing to the current food price crisis. This crisis comes at a time when the world's income distribution is more unequal than ever, and it compromises progress toward achieving the poverty and hunger Millennium Development Goals. In response to high food prices, von Braun noted that IFPRI has recommended two sets of policy actions. The first set is an emergency package that can yield immediate impact:

  1. expand emergency responses and humanitarian assistance to food-insecure people and people threatening government legitimacy;
  2. eliminate agricultural export bans and export restrictions;
  3. undertake fast-impact food production programs in key areas; and
  4. change biofuel policies.

The second set of actions is a resilience package that should be undertaken immediately but whose impact will take longer to be felt:

  1. calm markets with the use of market-oriented regulation of speculation, shared public grain stocks, strengthened food-import financing, and reliable food aid;
  2. invest in social protection;
  3. scale up investments for sustained agricultural growth; and
  4. complete the Doha Round of World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations.

Mark Rosegrant, director of IFPRI's Environment and Production Technology Division, said that efforts to promote agricultural production growth should focus on three actions. The first action is to initiate fast-impact food production programs in key areas. In the short term, decisionmakers should improve access to seeds, fertilizers, and credit for the small farm sector. They should adopt procurement programs for small farmers through which agricultural products will be sold at guaranteed minimum prices that reflect long-term international market prices. Targeted subsidy programs for seeds, fertilizers, irrigation, and water should be focused on and limited to least-developed countries.

The second action to promote agricultural production growth is to change biofuel policies. Measures should be taken to make more grains and oilseeds currently used for fuel available for food and feed. Biofuel production could be frozen at current levels or reduced, or a moratorium could be imposed on the use of grains and oilseeds for biofuels. Such a moratorium may require compensating investors. Europe and the United States should remove blending mandates, import tariffs, and biofuel blending subsidies. And more support should go toward developing bioenergy technologies that do not compete with food.

The third action is to scale up investments for sustained agricultural growth. Governments should expand public funding for rural infrastructure, services, agricultural research, science, and technology. Crop management practices like water harvesting, minimum tillage, and integrated soil fertility management should be promoted.

Maximo Torero, director of IFPRI's Markets, Trade, and Institutions Division, presented a set of three actions designed to promote agricultural trade and calm markets. First, countries should eliminate agricultural export bans and export restrictions, which may account for about 30 percent of the current price increases. This action should not be undertaken country by country or added to the Doha Round of the World Trade Organization (WTO). Rather, it should be addressed by an ad hoc forum of global players negotiating according to a code of conduct and in spirit of mutual building.

Second, countries should calm markets through market-oriented regulation. Market behaviors like speculation and hoarding contribute to the price rise, and governments are increasingly curbing hoarding. Market-calming measures could include commodity exchanges, which can help create fair, orderly, and efficient food markets. The main grain-producing countries should make a coordinated set of pledges for a modest grain reserve at global or regional levels.

Third, the Doha Round of WTO negotiations should be completed. A world short in supply and facing regional and country-specific fluctuations needs more opportunities for trade, not fewer. The current price situation should be viewed as an opportunity, because it should be easier for countries to agree to lower agricultural tariffs when market prices, especially for sensitive commodities, are high.

John Hoddinott, deputy director of IFPRI's Food Consumption and Nutrition Division, spoke about social protection. Faced with a price shock of this magnitude, the poor are forced to adopt coping strategies. These strategies may avert hunger in the short term, but they risk irreversible consequences, like the loss of productive capital, the withdrawal of children from school, and increased levels of malnutrition. The role of social protection is to avert this "quiet crisis" through protective actions to mitigate short-term risks and preventive actions to prevent longer-term negative consequences. Protective actions involve financing the global safety net and strengthening national responses. Preventive actions involve preserving the productive capital of the poor, ensuring that children stay in school, and preventing malnutrition.

Highlights of the discussion follow:

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