[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 58 (Thursday, April 22, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2580-S2581]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FOOD SECURITY
Mr. CASEY. Mr. President, I rise today to speak about an issue that
was the subject of a Foreign Relations Committee hearing today, of
course, chaired by our chairman, John Kerry, and the ranking member,
Senator Dick Lugar.
Today in America and worldwide, every 5 seconds a child dies from
starvation. Every 5 seconds across the world, every 5 seconds every day
is the reality that stares us in the face. While the United States has
historically played an important role in addressing hunger
internationally, this simple fact should serve as a galvanizing call to
action on this issue.
The 2008 global food crisis brought attention to the fact that
emergency food assistance was not enough, as generous as our country is
and as important as that strategy is to confronting the problem. The
emergency food assistance that year was not enough, and donors in
recipient countries that need to work together to address this systemic
problem need to do so even more so today.
The Obama administration has rightly prioritized food security and
the political support in the Senate is growing every day for the Lugar-
Casey Global Food Security Act. I commend Senator Lugar for his work on
these issues for many years and, of course, I wish to commend and thank
the work that our chairman, Senator John Kerry, is doing on this issue
every day as well.
Creating an environment where local farmers can produce for
themselves and their communities as well as easily trade to get their
goods to market is the key to fundamentally changing this ongoing
crisis.
With a host of competing priorities for the attention of the United
States, I believe there are at least two reasons food security matters,
even in the midst of some of the challenges we are facing domestically.
First, this is a humanitarian crisis of immense proportions that we
can go a long way toward solving. I think when we talk about this
issue, no matter who we are, no matter what our station in life is,
this is an issue that we come to, summoned by our conscience, and I
think that is true in the Senate as well.
As one of the richest countries in the world, I believe we have a
moral obligation to do all we can to help. This crisis is solvable with
a combination of assistance and emphasis on providing small farmers
around the world the know-how, the technology, and the means to provide
for themselves.
The second reason, in addition to this being a humanitarian crisis as
to why this is so important, is global hunger is a national security
issue. Instability arising from conflict across the world over access
to food is a documented problem. The 2008 food crisis, unfortunately,
brought this into sharp, acute focus.
We saw it in Somalia, where struggles to gain access to food have
enveloped population centers in violence. We have seen it in Egypt as
citizens rioted for access to bread. We have seen it in Haiti more
recently, where hospital beds filled in 2008 with those injured during
food riots. Increased instability in any of these countries has a
direct impact on U.S. national security interests.
The root causes of this perfect storm of crisis are well known but
worth recounting. In 2008, food demand was driven higher due to
expanding population and rising incomes. More cereals were needed to
feed livestock for the production of meat and dairy products and to
fill increasing demand for biofuels across the world. Higher oil
prices, combined with weak harvests and rising global demand, created a
scramble for resources. Wheat prices more than doubled and rice prices
more than tripled between January and May of 2008.
Twenty-eight countries imposed export bans on their crops, driving up
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commodity prices and limiting supply. This led to political unrest
across the globe. It concentrated among developing countries with
large, food-insecure, poor urban populations.
While this was indeed a perfect storm of events, the underlying
issues that created this crisis continued. In Sub-Saharan Africa, for
example, 80 to 90 percent of all cereal prices remain 25 percent higher
than they were before the crisis began. In many Asian and Latin
American and Caribbean countries, prices are still more than 25 percent
higher than in the precrisis period of time. In the wake of the
economic crisis, the World Food Programme began receiving requests for
assistance even from countries that previously were able to provide for
themselves.
The peripheral effects of food insecurity are considerable. High
rates of hunger are shown to be linked to gender inequality, especially
in terms of education and literacy, which also negatively affects the
rate of child malnutrition. This number is stunning. It is estimated
that 60 percent of the world's chronically hungry are women and girls--
60 percent--20 percent of whom are children under the age of 5. It is
almost incalculable. Those numbers are staggering and should do more
than just bother us and just inform our conscience; they should also
motivate us to do something about this crisis. I cite these figures,
and too often in Washington we are guilty of doing just that--citing
figures. But they have real impact and real meaning.
I have had the privilege of personally working with some very special
women in Pennsylvania who took it upon themselves to really highlight
some of these issues. The Witnesses to Hunger is a project that started
in Philadelphia, PA. These women were given cameras to photograph their
own lives, to tell us the truth of their experiences, and to raise
awareness on many critical issues, including specifically hunger.
Last year, I had the honor, as did my wife Teresa, of bringing their
exhibit to Washington, and in November we launched a tour across
Pennsylvania to highlight this issue. I cannot begin to describe how
moved I was--as were so many others who saw this exhibit--to see the
photographs taken by these women and to hear their stories of hunger
and of poverty. Their bravery and rare courage in sharing the struggles
they face to provide a safe, nurturing home for their children will
always stay with me.
These mothers who brought Witnesses to Hunger to life are constant
reminders that the programs we in Congress advocate for and the new
initiatives we can develop can have a profound impact on people's
lives, whether it is in our towns and communities in Pennsylvania or in
any other State or around the world, because this is a problem our
world and our country face.
Hunger in a country such as Pakistan poses both a humanitarian and a
security issue. Last year, over 77 million people in that country,
Pakistan, were considered food insecure by the World Food Programme.
That is nearly half of their population. As their military conducts its
continued operations against extremist forces, their numbers could
increase. Hunger and competition for food can lead to further
instability and potentially undermine the Pakistani Government's
leadership at a very critical time.
The global food crisis is still a serious problem, and despite the
efforts of the administration, we still have a lot of catching up to do
in order to respond properly. According to the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, the U.S. commitment to agricultural development
has declined in recent years, though emergency food assistance
continues at robust levels. Worldwide, the share of agriculture in
development assistance has fallen from a high of 13 percent in 1985 to
4 percent between 2002 and 2007. The U.S. development assistance to
African agriculture fell from its peak of about $500 million in 1988 to
less than $100 million in 2006. We can do a lot better than that.
The USAID has been hardest hit during this period. The USAID once
considered agricultural expertise to be a core strength but today
operates under diminished capacity. That is an understatement. Here is
what I mean. In 1990, USAID employed 181 agricultural specialists, but
in 2009 just 22--from 181 to 22 in just those years, less than 20
years. That number has gone up from 22 recently, with the new
administration, but it is still far too few to work on this problem.
In the 1970s, the U.S. Government sponsored 20,000 annual
scholarships for future leadership in agriculture, engineering, and
related fields. Today, that number has fallen to less than 900. So we
are not developing the workforce and expertise we need.
We simply don't currently have adequate infrastructure in our
government to respond to this crisis. The administration is making
progress, though. The administration's Global Hunger and Food Security
Initiative, known by the acronym GHFSI, is a comprehensive approach to
food security based on country- and community-led planning and
collaboration. I welcome this opportunity to hear directly from the
administration about this effort. While I know the Obama administration
has worked assiduously to coordinate an interagency process and
selection criteria for country participation around the world,
questions remain in terms of overall leadership of the initiative, as
well as its plan to develop internal expertise and capacity that is
sustainable over the long term.
In the Senate, we have worked to bring attention to the world's
hungry. Senator Lugar, as I mentioned before, a respected leader in
this field for decades, and I have joined together to introduce the
Global Food Security Act. I will highlight three provisions before I
conclude.
First, the Global Food Security Act would provide enhanced
coordination within the U.S. Government so that USAID, the Department
of Agriculture, and other agencies are working together and not at
cross-purposes.
Second, this bill would expand U.S. investment in the agricultural
productivity of developing nations, so that other nations facing
escalating food prices can rely less on emergency food assistance and
instead take steps to expand their own crop production. Every dollar
invested in agricultural research and development generates $9 for
every dollar worth of food in the developing worlds.
Third, this bill, the Global Food Security Act, will modernize our
system of emergency food assistance so that it is more flexible and can
provide aid on short notice. We do that by authorizing a new $500
million fund for U.S. emergency food assistance.
This is one of those rare occasions--unfortunately, too rare--where a
serious crisis was greeted with substantial response by an
administration--in this case, the Obama administration--as well as
bipartisan collaboration in the Senate and the House. I am encouraged
that there has been positive movement toward fundamentally changing how
we look at food security issues. Such support, however, is not
permanent, and we should enact this multiyear authorization bill to
ensure that such congressional support exists in the future, many years
from now. We cannot wait for another massive food crisis before taking
action on this legislation. This is the right thing to do, and we will
ultimately enhance the security of the United States and our allies.
Mr. President, this isn't just a matter of being summoned by our
conscience. That we know is part of the reason we are doing this. This
is also a grave national security issue for us and our allies. For that
reason and so many others, we need to pass the Global Food Security Act
and support the administration's efforts on the Global Hunger and Food
Security Initiative.
I yield the floor.
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