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US Civil society call upon US Govt. to support G33 Food Security Proposal
Ambassador Mike Froman
United State Trade Representative (USTR)
Office of the United States Trade Representative
600 17th Street NW
Washington, DC 20508
Ambassador Michael Punke
Deputy USTR and Permanent Representative to the World Trade Organization
U.S. Mission
11 Route de Pregny
1292 Chambesy-Geneva
Switzerland
Dear Ambassador Froman,
We write to express our dismay at U.S. opposition to proposals at the World Trade Organization (WTO) by developing countries to address their food security objectives, including reducing volatility in food prices and supplies. We urge you to support the G33’s proposal to allow for greater public spending to ensure more stable food supplies and prices.
Food prices have been extremely volatile in recent years. This has been harmful to farmers in the global North and South. We continue to call for the establishment of grain reserves to dampen that volatility and advance fair prices for farmers everywhere. Grain reserves are neither simple nor cheap to operate. Yet the alternatives are worse. The lack of insurance against market failure cost enormous sums of money in emergency assistance, money the international community has to pay. The lack of provision for instability also costs lives – lives lost to hunger as an immediate consequence, and lives blighted for several generations by the effects of malnutrition on fetal development.
International markets serve those with the greatest purchasing power. This makes market mechanisms alone inadequate from the perspective of those whose purchasing power to secure food for their families is eclipsed by other demands on food systems, including the demands that generate significant food waste, as well as the demand for feed and fuel. The U.S. government has intervened through both its agriculture and its social welfare programs for over 100 years in recognition of market failures that need correction.
Yet our administration’s trade policy ignores our domestic experience. For instance, while many in Congress are fighting to retain public funding levels for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) at home, you are seeking to undermine policy space for developing countries to fulfil their own food security objectives with far fewer resources than are available in the United States. Many of the poor in developing countries are often also small scale agricultural producers. Contrary to the letter sent to you by US commodity groups and agribusiness interests on October 24, we, the many US farm, faith-based and non-governmental organizations working on agriculture, food security, nutrition, health and economic justice acknowledge that the current agriculture rules in the WTO (including domestic support) are rigged to support big agribusiness. We do all countries a disservice when we promote only commercial export interests, ignoring the real political (and moral) imperative that governments are responsible for their citizens’ welfare, including their right to adequate and affordable food and fair prices to agriculture producers.
The G33 food security proposal is an important first step in the reframing of global trade rules to promote more equitable and stable markets, especially for countries that face huge food security challenges. The U.S. proposal for a “Peace Clause” to suspend potential challenges to those efforts at the WTO is an unfair and inadequate response to a sensible proposal to explore new options to improve stability in national and global markets. We support the G33 proposal and call on the U.S. government to do the same.
Sincerely,
ActionAid USA American Medical Student Association Center for Food Safety Center for Policy Analysis on Trade and Health (CPATH) Family Farm Defenders Farm Worker Association of Florida Food Democracy Now! Food First Food & Water Watch Friends of the Earth USA Global Exchange Global Health through Education Service and Training (GHETS) Global to Local Advocates for Justice Grassroots International Health Alliance International Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy International Forum on Globalization Illinois Fair Trade Coalition Just Foreign Policy
| Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns Minnesota Fair Trade Coalition National Family Farm Coalition National Farmers Union Next GenU Oakland Institute Oxfam America PLANT Pivot Point Rainforest Action Network Rebuild the Dream Rural Coalition / Coalicion Rural Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur Texas Fair Trade Coalition The Second Chance Foundation Washington Fair Trade Coalition Wisconsin Fair Trade Coalition WhyHunger |