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The Associated Press’ Trenton Daniel
takes a look at high levels of malnutrition and food insecurity
in Haiti, reporting that: “Three years after an earthquake
killed hundreds of thousands and the U.S. promised that Haiti
would ‘build back better,’ hunger is worse than ever. Despite
billions of dollars from around the world pledged toward
rebuilding efforts, the country's food problems underscore just
how vulnerable its 10 million people remain.
“In 1997 some 1.2 million
Haitians didn't have enough food to eat. A decade later the
number had more than doubled. Today, that figure is 6.7 million,
or a staggering 67% of the population that goes without food
some days, can't afford a balanced diet or has limited access to
food, according to surveys by the government's National
Coordination of Food Security. As many as 1.5 million of those
face malnutrition and other hunger-related problems.”
The AP article follows the
release last week of a USAID-sponsored “Famine Early Warning
System Network” report that warns that “the early depletion of
food supplies from bad harvests, the growing dependence for poor
households on market, and a reduction in agricultural employment
opportunities have contributed to the increasingly widespread
acute food insecurity throughout the country. Many
municipalities are currently in crisis.”
Late rains, seed shortages
(driving up seed prices), and withering crops that were planted
early are factors contributing to climbing food prices, the
report states.
Daniel surveys some of the
government’s responses to the challenge. One of the more hopeful
efforts to tackle hunger in Haiti that Daniel describes is the
Petrocaribe-funded program “Aba Grangou”:
“Shortly after taking office,
President Michel Martelly launched a nationwide program led by
his wife, Sophia, called Aba Grangou, Creole for "end hunger."
Financed with $30 million from Venezuela's PetroCaribe fund, the
program aims to halve the number of people who are hungry in
Haiti by 2016 and eradicate hunger and malnutrition altogether
by 2025. Some 2.2 million children are supposed to take part in
a school food program financed by the fund.
“Eberwein, whose government
agency oversees Aba Grangou, said 60,000 mothers have received
cash transfers for keeping their children in school. A half
million food kits were distributed after Hurricane Sandy, along
with 45,000 seed kits to replenish damaged crops, he said. Mid-
to long-term solutions require creating jobs.
“But the villagers in the Belle
Anse area say they've seen scant evidence of the program, as if
officials have forgotten the deaths in 2008 of at least 26
severely malnourished children in this very region. That same
year, the government collapsed after soaring food prices
triggered riots.”
The article notes that USAID,
which has awarded $1.15 billion in contracts and grants to for
work in Haiti since the 2010 earthquake, has devoted only
two-thirds as much ($20 million) to a post-Hurricane Sandy food
program as the Petrocaribe-funded Aba Grangou. Not to worry – AP
cites an expert who assures readers that were people not
receiving the aid, they would riot:
“USAID has allocated nearly $20
million to international aid groups to focus on food problems
since Hurricane Sandy, but villagers in southern Haiti said they
have seen little evidence of that.
“Despite the discrepancy, one
public health expert said there's sufficient proof that at least
some of the aid is reaching the population. Were it not, Richard
Garfield said, Haiti would see mass migration and unrest.
“‘Overall aid has gotten to
people pretty well. If aid hadn't gotten to people that place
would be so much more of a mess,’ said Garfield, a professor
emeritus at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public
Health and now a specialist in emergency response at the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ‘You'd see
starvation and riots ... The absence of terrible things is about
the best positive thing that we can say.’”
But as has been discussed
repeatedly in news articles, on CEPR’s blog, and elsewhere – and
as former president Clinton has admitted – U.S. food assistance
policies are in large part responsible for the destabilization
of Haitian agriculture and the related prevalence of food
insecurity and malnutrition. As we have previously noted,
Chemonics, by far the largest single recipient of USAID funds,
used to be a sister company to Comet Rice, which was a central
player in this tragedy.
Proposed reforms to such food aid practices made by
the Obama administration could assist an additional four million
people for the same amount of funds, according to USAID; the
Center for Global Development (CGD) estimates as many as 10
million more. As CGD’s Beth Schwanke describes, these proposals
would “relax in-kind and cargo preference requirements on
emergency aid, shift $250 million of non-emergency food aid into
a new account without in-kind restrictions, and eliminate
monetization.” But these and other proposed reforms are being
strongly opposed by vested interests that profit from the
current system, at Haitians’ expense. |