Chris Barrett Cornell University May 12, 2011 Congressional Research Service Briefing Capitol Visitor Center, Washington, DC The Evolution of US Food Aid:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Presentation to the Overseas Development Institute Friday, 30 January 2004 London Development Cooperation Report 2003 Presentation by Richard Manning,
Advertisements

Monetization Challenges DALE KABAT – Catholic Relief Services IFAC 2008.
Questions? GAO Presentation 2007 International Food Aid Conference Transportation Challenges That Impede the Efficiency of U.S. Food Aid Delivery.
GAO Presentation 2007 International Food Aid Conference Various Challenges Impede the Efficiency and Effectiveness of U.S. Food Aid.
Food aid provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill Stephanie Mercier Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
THE NEW FOOD SECURITY ASSESSMENT TOOLS Central Asia Regional Risk Assessment Conference Almaty April 2011.
Chris Barrett Cornell University May 7, 2012 Congressional Staff Briefing Congressional Research Service Washington, DC US Food Aid: Background Trends.
Chapter 4 global analysis Section 4.1 International Trade Section 4.2
Good Morning!. Strengthening Local Capacity to Build Resiliency & Respond to Food Security Shocks International Food Aid Conference Kansas City,
Improving Food Aid: What Reforms Would Yield The Highest Payoff? Erin Lentz and Chris Barrett Cornell University AAEA Symposium on Food Aid Controversies.
Enhancing Resilience in the Horn of Africa CTA Brussels Briefing Brussels, March 4, 2013 Jean-François Maystadt International Food Policy Research Institute.
1 International Food Aid and Development Conference August 2-4, 2010 Megatrends in Food Security Linking Food Aid and Food Security Source: GAO (photos)
Presentation to Reconsidering Food Aid workshop Partnership to Cut Hunger and Poverty in Africa Chris Barrett Cornell University March 2006 U.S. Food Aid.
1 IFADC 2011 USAID & USDA LRP Support to WFP Catherine Feeney.
USDA’s Local and Regional Purchase Pilot Program Fiscal Years 2008 thru 2012.
Agricultural Trade Outlook August 2011 Philip Abbott.
Food Aid After Fifty Years: Recasting Its Role in Support of MDG#1 Chris Barrett, Cornell University Presentation to Senior Executives of Catholic Relief.
From choice, a world of possibilities IPPF/WHR – UNFPA/DC USAID Graduation Policy Fact-finding Trip Peru – May 16-22, 2010.
Chris Barrett, Cornell University and Dan Maxwell, CARE International Routledge, 2005 Food Aid After Fifty Years: Recasting Its Role Cargill Flour Mill,
Chris Barrett October 27, 2010 Guest lecture to History/ASRC 3652 Cornell University Food Aid for Africa: Past and Present.
USAID Office of Food for Peace Dale Skoric. Trends? In 2008, an additional 115 million people joined the ranks of the hungry. Over 1 billion people worldwide.
New Modalities of International Food Assistance: A Review of the Evidence Joanna B. Upton Erin C. Lentz Christopher B. Barrett Cornell University Presentation.
United States Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service USDA Local and Regional Food Aid Procurement Pilot Project: Tools for Development.
International Food Aid and Development Conference Kansas City, Missouri June 27-29, 2011 For the full report, visit the GAO Web site, (GAO ,
USAID Office of Food for Peace Dale Skoric. U.S. Food Assistance - General Outline Title I: Trade & Development Assistance USDA Title II: Emergency &
The Economics and Politics of U.S. Agricultural Policy James Dunn Pennsylvania State University.
1 An Overview of the Status of Agricultural Mechanization in the World and the Role of Bio-fuels by Dr. Geoffrey C. Mrema Director Rural Infrastructure.
Meeting of the CEI Working Group on Agriculture – Rome, 22 May 2006 FAO’s Technical Assistance Framework for Trust Funds in the Western Balkans 2006 –
United States Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service USDA Local and Regional Food Aid Procurement Pilot Project Updates and Next Steps.
Canada and Food Aid. Types of food aid  Canada provides food aid through four channels;  Emergency aid ($44 million in 2002)  Food Aid in Development.
LRP Market Monitoring Training Local and Regional Procurement 2. Global Framework Overview.
Chris Barrett C.H. Dyson School of Applied Economics & Management and Department of Economics, Cornell University November 19, 2012 Community and International.
U.S. Wheat Associates Serving Wheat Producers North Dakota Wheat Commission County Representatives Meeting John Oades, Vice President U.S. Wheat Associates.
Food Aid, American Agriculture, the World Trade Organization and International Development Chris Barrett Cornell University J.W. Fanning Lecture, University.
Hungry for More Reforming U.S. International Food Aid Policy May 2008 Kate Kingery Rana Merza Simon Meyer Obinnaya Oji Jennifer Thill.
U.S. Food Aid and Agricultural Cargo Preference Policy Liz Bageant, Chris Barrett and Erin Lentz Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management.
Chapter 1 GlobalizationGlobalization 1. What Is Globalization? The globalization of markets refers to; “The merging of historically distinct and separate.
Budget, Agriculture and Trade: The EU’s Intractable Economic Triangle Tim Josling FSI, Stanford and IC, London European RoundTable, Sat Feb 4, 2006.
 Canada provides food aid through four channels;  Emergency aid ($44 million in 2002)  Food Aid in Development Context Bi-lateral ($330 million 2009.
Food Aid: Past, Present and Future* Chris Barrett Department of Applied Economics & Management African Food Security & Natural Resources Management Program.
Lecture 2 – Global Trends in Agriculture EconS350 Fall Semester, 2010.
The Impact of the World Trade Organization on Food Aid Policies USDA and USAID EXPORT FOOD AID CONFERENCE Kansas, City, Missouri April 25, 2006 Floyd Gaibler,
U.S. Development Assistance in an Evolving World Jeffrey Alwang Professor Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics Virginia Tech.
April 17, The Midterm Review of the CAP Issues and options Franz Fischler.
CFNA China’s Pulses Production and Trade in 2008 Season.
Global View of Grain Markets James Dunn Ag Economist Pennsylvania State University.
8-1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall International Business Part Three Theories and Institutions: Trade and Investment.
The Food Crisis and the Region: Evidence and challenges Enrique Aldaz-Carroll “World Bank-CSO East Asia Pacific Regional Workshop” Jakarta, June 18, 2008.
The World Bank Agriculture and Rural Development: Hunger and Malnutrition Kevin Cleaver World Bank Seminar Series 18 January 2006.
1 Aid for Trade: Complements for Development Joseph E. Stiglitz Columbia University, and the Initiative for Policy Dialogue.
DRAFT – Mar 1/06 Is China Taking Over the World? International Law of the American Bar Association 2006 Spring Meeting April 6, 2006 Shirley-Ann George,
Food Aid for Market Development in Sub- Saharan Africa Awudu Abdulai Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich Christopher B. Barrett Cornell University,
SOME MYTHS ABOUT FOOD SHORTAGES. 1 billion people are hungry There are 12 myths according to the ‘Institute for food and development Policy’ These myths.
Researchers’ Role In Continuously Improving International Food Assistance Christopher B. Barrett Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics & Management.
UNIVERSITIES AND DONOR ASSISTED DEVELOPMENT: TITLE XII, FIVE YEARS LATER FAMINE PREVENTION AND FREEDOM FROM HUNGER IMPROVEMENT ACT OF 2000.
The Developing Countries’ Emerging Role in the Global Market Robert L. Thompson Chairman International Food & Agricultural Trade Policy Council 24 May.
MULTILATERAL DEVELOPMENT BANK MEETING ON DEBT ISSUES The World Bank, Washington, DC, July 8 & 9, 2009 Impact of the global financial crisis on developing.
Food Aid and Food Assistance: What Have We Learned Here? What Key Things Do We Still Need to Learn? Christopher B. Barrett Cornell University 4 th Transatlantic.
Regional Rural Development Briefings A series of meetings on ACP-EU development issues West Africa Regional Briefing: Climate change and Land acquisition.
 The world produces 17% more food per person today than 30 years ago  The rate of food production has increased faster than the rate of population growth.
22.2 Working for Peace. Diplomacy and Alliances Diplomacy is an important part of foreign policy. The process of conducting relations between countries.
Objectives Describe the ways in which countries around the world are interdependent. Understand how international treaties and organizations make global.
Charting a New Direction for U.S. International Food Aid
ECON 331 INTERNATIONAL TRADE and ECONOMICS
Global hunger –myth or fact?
Globalization.
FOOD AID BILATERAL DONORS Michela Broseghini Erika Chavez
FOOD AID BILATERAL DONORS Michela Broseghini Erika Chavez
Globalization.
Presentation transcript:

Chris Barrett Cornell University May 12, 2011 Congressional Research Service Briefing Capitol Visitor Center, Washington, DC The Evolution of US Food Aid: Major Changes and Key Issues

United Nations Millenium Development Goal #1: Reduce by half the proportion of people (i) living on less than a dollar a day and (ii) who suffer from hunger. What role for food aid? -Save lives and fulfill human right to food -Protect assets (especially human health) -Facilitate productivity and asset growth where food availability and poor market performance are limiting. Food aid in support of MDG #1 Food aid is a complement to other resources. Need to embed food aid in broader dev’t strategy, not fit development strategies to food aid policies.

US still accounts for 50-60% of total food aid worldwide each year. US food aid policy drives global food aid system. Background

: - Generous farm price supports and gov’t held stocks - Large regions outside North American cereals marketshed - Hunger widespread globally initially - Cold War: food aid flowed initially to Asia, Latin America, Europe and North Africa PL 480 was a direct response to these conditions and succeeded in meeting some of the resulting goals. Times have changed. Background

1.Price Supports and Gov’t Grain Stocks History: - Gov’t stocks (CCC/FOR) down 95% Now procure based on IFBs, at a premium - No price impact, yet myth persists b/c people conflate correlation with causality Major changes 1990-present: - Generous farm price supports and gov’t held stocks ended. Food aid now purchased rather than shipped from stocks. - Globalization of US food market … covers the globe now. - Cold War over (and food aid not politically effective). - Food aid for trade promotion now violates WTO agreement on agriculture (and never really worked anyway).

5. Shift From Program to Emergency Food Aid: - Until 1992, most US food aid was “program” – govt-to-govt concessional sales on credit: Title I and Section 416(b) -Now mainly to NGOs (>40%) and WFP/IEFR (>40%) for emergency response (~80% of Title II now emergency) -Now 70% of flows are to Africa, up from ~1/3 in 1990s Major changes

7. Other Donors Reformed Their Food Aid Programs -Budget integration: in Canada, EU and other key donor countries other than the US, food aid moved within international development budgets and out of farm policy and agriculture budgets. This enables allocation based on humanitarian and development criteria. -Untying: In the EU and Canada, the untying of food aid has been, in principle, complete. Cash is commonly provided instead of commodities and recipients can source from anywhere. Example: when Denmark decoupled, replacing cheese and canned meat food aid with bulk grain, wheat flour, peas and vegetable oil, it generated 6x calories and 3x protein at lower cost, from Exception: US has neither budget integration nor significant untyingdget integration nor untying. Major changes

Key issues The Golden Hour, LRP and Untying of Procurement: -Golden Hour principle: rapid response essential. Delays are expensive and deadly ( Niger example) -Other than US, more than 80% of global food aid is now LRP because it is typically faster and cheaper than transoceanic shipments. -Examples: GAO: 10-country averages in sub-Saharan Africa: 21 weeks for U.S food, 7-8 weeks for LRP CFGB: Kenya, Ethiopia, & Afghanistan weeks for Canadian food, 4-6 weeks for LRP -Farm Bill still sharply limits LRP in US food aid programs. -(Expensive) prepositioning the best feasible option now

6Monetization -Insufficient resources for non-emergency development programming makes it difficult to prevent new emergencies and to limit their adverse impact when they do occur. -Insufficient cash resources to meet needs: distorts NGO behavior … monetization is the result. From ~10% of non-emergency Title II in the early 1990s to >60% the past several years. -Monetization is a source of WTO tension (akin to an export subsidy). -Monetization is inherently inefficient. -Can be disruptive to host country markets, undermining efforts to build up local commercial agricultural marketing channels. Hence: -CARE’s 2005 decision to phase out monetization. -The importance of community development funds proposal Key issues

4. Cargo preference Cargo Preference Act to support merchant marine for national security purposes … share increased 50-75% in Plus Great Lakes Set Aside added in 1996, further restricting shipping. -Impact: higher freight costs. ACP resulted in a 46% markup over competitive freight costs. -70% of ACP vessels not militarily useful, yet these capture >90% of cargo preference premiums. -And ~40% go to foreign shipowners. -Pentagon/MARAD have an alternate program (Maritime Support Program) to maintain sealift capacity Key issues

Budget Integration -Especially if US food aid programs are formally focused solely on humanitarian and development objectives, bring all programs under USAID and foreign relations/development. -Bureaucratic duplication between USDA and USAID is costly and unnecessary and invites criticism and skepticism (e.g., in WTO). -IDA and EFSA as an example of how this can work. Key issues

International Food Assistance Governance -Food Aid Convention and FAO/CSSD ineffective – need to revise membership, accounting and adopt codes of conduct -FAC presently being renegotiated -FAO/CSSD could be shut down immediately with no loss Key issues

Food aid remains important as part of the “twin track” strategy found in the 2009 Rome Principles. US still leads the global food aid system. But much has changed … the next Farm Bill is dealing with a radically different food aid program than what the US had 20 years ago. Improving awareness of changed landscape will help build the coalitions necessary to tackle key remaining issues: - LRP - Monetization - Cargo preference - Budget integration - Food assistance governance Conclusion

Thank you for your time and interest!