Food First: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity, Volume 10Abstract: Dispelling old myths regarding the root causes of hunger, a prescription for food self-reliance, applicable to developing and industrial countries, is detailed as the only path toward true self-reliance. In question and answer format, commonly accepted obstacles such as insufficient production, inappropriate technology, and discriminatory trade practices in meeting the world's food needs are considered. Hunger is a social problem rather than a technical problem, and calls for America as well as developing countries to explore their values and modes of operation. Putting food first requires that each country meet its own food needs before exports, and requires planning and a struggle against a system that increasingly concentrates wealth and power in a few. |
Contents
Why This Book? | 3 |
Standing Room Only? Too Many People? | 13 |
The Price Scare? | 22 |
Copyright | |
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acres Africa agribusiness agricul agricultural Alan Berg American areas banana Bangladesh Brazil capital cash crops chemical China cocoa coffee colonial companies consumer corn cotton coun cultivated drought earnings economic elite export crops famine farm feed fertilizer food aid Food Power food production food self-reliance foreign exchange Global grain Green Revolution grow growers harvest hunger hungry imported income increase India industrial countries International investment irrigation Jim Hightower labor land reform landless landowners Latin America less livestock loans majority ment Mexico million Monte multinational corporations Nestlé Organization peasants percent pesticides pests plant plantations poor population problem profit question Ralston Purina Report rice rural Sahel seeds sell Senegal small farmers social soil South Korea soybean sugar tion trade underdeveloped countries United USDA veloped village wheat workers World Bank yields