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(Or How a "Doomed" Class Refused to Accept Extinction) By Walden Bello* (A longer version of this piece comes out in the April 2007 issue of Global Asia. It is reprinted with permission.) If the Doha Round of negotiations of the World Trade Organization is stalemated, a great part of the reason is the resistance of small farmers, among them Asia's farmers. One of the terrible truths of the 20th century is that it was a blight on small farmers or peasants everywhere. Before looking at the question of whether small farmers need protection from free trade, it is necessary to consider this historical background. This article will focus on Asia's peasantry but the history it recounts is one that is shared as well by farmers in other parts of the South and in the North. The Triple Threat to Asia's Peasantry In both wealthy capitalist economies and in socialist countries, farmers paid a heavy price. Asian industrialization also was carried out largely on the backs of the rural population as farm policies were manipulated to favor the needs of industry. In advanced capitalist countries like the United States, a deadly combination of economies of scale, capital-intensive technology and the market led to large corporations cornering agricultural production and processing, thus reducing small and medium farms to a marginal role in production and a minuscule portion of the work force.
While the big-business-biased dynamics of the market in capitalist
societies eliminated farmers as a class, they were eliminated by state
repression in the Soviet Union, which took to heart Karl Marx's snide
remarks about the 'idiocy of rural life,' and transformed them into
workers on collective farms. Expropriation of the peasants' surplus
production was meant not only to feed the cities but also to serve as
the source of the so-called 'primitive accumulation' of capital for
industrialization.
In Asia, government policies placed the burden of industrialization on
the peasantry during the phase of so-called 'developmentalist'
industry-first policies. In Taiwan and South Korea, land reform first
triggered prosperity in the countryside in the 1950's, stimulating
industrialization. But with the shift to export-led industrialization
in 1965, there was demand for low-wage industrial labor, so government
policies deliberately depressed prices of agricultural goods. In this
way, peasants subsidized the emergence of 'Newly Industrializing
Economies.' Peasant incomes declined relative to urban incomes, and the
resulting stagnation of a once vibrant countryside led to massive
migration to the cities and a steady supply of cheap labor for
factories; this left farmers poor, aging, and an increasingly small
part of the national work force.
In the Philippines and Thailand, industry-first strategies led to
similar policies. In Thailand, for instance, a tax on rice exports
insulated the domestic market from price movements in the international
market, depressing the price of rice and reducing the wage costs of
non-agricultural employers. A transfer of real wealth from the
countryside to the city took place every year between 1962 and 1981,
except for 1970. Not surprisingly, despite the image of Thailand as an
agricultural superpower, a large percentage of the rural population
remains poor.
In China, millions of peasants died of starvation during the Great Leap
Forward as the grain surplus was requisitioned to finance Mao Zedong's
super-industrialization drive. The chaos of the Cultural Revolution
allowed peasants to regain a degree of control over production because
the government was in crisis and following the death of Mao in 1976,
Deng Xiaoping introduced the 'household contract responsibility
system.' Each family was given a piece of land to farm, along with the
right to sell what was left over after a fixed proportion of the
produce was sold to the government at a state-determined price. This
led to peasant prosperity that, as in Taiwan, stimulated industrial
production to fulfill rural demand.
But, as in Taiwan, this golden age of the peasantry came to an end, and
the cause was identical: the adoption of urban-centered,
export-oriented industrialization. Primitive capital accumulation for
industry took the form of requisitioning peasant surpluses via heavy
taxation. Currently, the various tiers of the Chinese government foist
a total of 269 different taxes on farmers, along with often-arbitrary
administrative charges. Not surprisingly, in many places, taxes now eat
up 15 per cent of farmers' income, three times the official national
limit of five per cent. Not surprisingly, too, while the economy has
been growing at 8-10 per cent a year, peasant income has stagnated, so
that urban dwellers now have, on average, six times the income of
peasants. True indeed is the observation of the rural advocates Chen
Guidi and Wu Chuntao that the urban industrial economy has been built
'on the shoulders of peasants.'
The Typhoon of Trade Liberalization
While policies that made peasants subsidize industrialization were
harsh, they were at least mitigated by trade policies that barred
agricultural imports that were even cheaper than local commodities. In
practically all-Asian countries with agricultural sectors, imports were
tightly controlled via quotas and high tariffs. This protective shield,
however, was severely eroded when countries signed the Agreement on
Agriculture (AOA) and began joining the World Trade Organization (WTO)
starting in 1995.
The AOA forced open agricultural markets by banning quotas, converting
these to tariffs and requiring governments to import a minimum volume
of each agricultural commodity at a low tariff. At the same time, under
the pretext of controlling the heavy subsidization of agriculture in
developed countries, the AOA institutionalized the various channels
through which subsidies flowed, such as export subsidies and direct
cash payments to farming interests in the Northern hemisphere.
The result was that in the first decade of the WTO, the level of
subsidization of agriculture actually increased in developed countries.
The total amount of agricultural subsidies provided by the OECD's
member governments rose from $182 billion in 1995 to $280 billion in
1997, $315 billion in 2001, $318 billion in 2002, and almost $300
billion in 2005. The U.S. and the European Union (EU) were spending
$9-10 billion more on subsidies in the early 2000's than they were a
decade earlier. For every US$100 of agro-exports from the U.S.,
government subsidies accounted for $20-30. In the case of the EU, the
figure was $40-50. While unsubsidized smallholders in the developing
world had to survive on less than $400 a year, American and European
farmers were receiving, respectively, an average of $21,000 and $16,000
a year in subsidies. (1)
With massive American and European subsidies distorting global prices
in a downward direction, developing country agriculture became
'non-competitive' under the conditions of WTO-mandated trade
liberalization. As the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) notes,
instantaneous import surges following the adoption of the AOA in a
number of developing countries led to 'consequential difficulties' for
'import competing industries' and the prospect that 'without adequate
market protection, accompanied by development programs, many more
domestic products would be displaced, or undermined sharply, leading to
a transformation of domestic diets and to increased dependence on
imported foods.' (2)
This historic shift to dependence on food imports was, needless to say, accompanied by the displacement of millions of peasants.
Even before the AOA took effect, the World Bank was predicting that
Indonesian farmers would be losers under the AOA regime. Indeed, since
1995, the marginalization of farmers 'in rice and other basic
commodities' has occurred while competitive pressures induced by trade
liberalization led to the expansion of commercial plantations at the
expense of smallholders.
In the Philippines, corn farmers, chicken farmers, cattle raisers, and
vegetable growers were driven to bankruptcy in huge numbers. In
Mindanao, where corn is a staple crop, many were wiped out. 'It is not
an uncommon sight to see farmers there leaving their corn to rot in the
fields as the domestic corn prices have dropped to levels [at which]
they have not been able to compete.' (3) With production stagnant, land
devoted to corn across the country contracted sharply from 3,149,300
hectares in 1995 to 2,150,300 hectares in 2000.
In China, tens of thousands of farmers, including those growing
soybeans and cotton, have been marginalized with China's entry into the
WTO. Indeed, to maintain and increase access for its manufacturers to
developed countries, the government has chosen to sacrifice its
farmers. According to the Institute of International Economics: The
challenge of managing the farm sector has grown with China's WTO
commitments in agriculture, which are more far reaching than those of
other developing countries and in certain respects exceed those of
high-income countries. The Chinese government agreed to reduce tariffs
and institute other policies that meaningfully increase market access;
accepted tight restrictions on the use of agricultural subsidies; and
pledged to eliminate all agricultural export subsidies ' commitments
that go far beyond those made by other participants in the Uruguay
Round negotiations that led to the WTO's creation. (4)
In Sri Lanka, thousands of small farmers staged street demonstrations
to protest the import of chicken parts and eggs, claiming they were
being driven out of business. The FAO concurred, noting that import
surges on major food items like chillies, onions, and potatoes made
local production 'precarious, as reflected in the significant drop in
areas of production (5)
In India, tariff liberalization, even in advance of WTO commitments,
has translated into a profound crisis in the countryside. Indian
economist Utsa Patnaik has described the calamity as 'a collapse in
rural livelihoods and incomes' owing to the steep fall in the prices of
farm products.(6) Along with this has come a rapid decline in
consumption of food grains, with the average Indian family of four
consuming 76 kg less in 2003 compared to 1998 and 88 kg less than a
decade earlier. The state of Andra Pradesh, which has become a byword
for agrarian distress owing to trade liberalization, saw a catastrophic
rise in farmers' suicides from 233 in 1998 to over 2,600 in 2002. One
estimate is that some 100,000 farmers in India have taken their lives
owing to collapsing prices stemming from rising imports.
Rural Backlash
In 2004, a rural backlash against agrarian distress led to the
unexpected defeat of the BJP-led ruling coalition that had campaigned
on the vision of 'India Shining.' India's rural electoral revolt was
part of a global phenomenon that put governments on notice that the
countryside would no longer accept policies that sacrifice farmer
interests. In Asia, protests in the form of land occupations, hunger
strikes, violent demonstrations, and symbolic suicides made rural
distress a pressing issue. In China, what the Ministry of Public
Security calls 'mass group incidents, ' in other words, protest
actions, increased from 8,700 in 1993 to 87,000 in 2005, most of them
in the countryside. Moreover, the incidents are growing in average
size, from 10 or fewer persons in the mid-1990s to 52 people per
incident in 2004. (7) Not surprisingly, the current leadership
increasingly sees the countryside as a powder keg that needs to be
defused.
Governments under Pressure
The political consequences of what trade liberalization and other
anti-agriculture policies brought to the countryside, led to the
formation of the Group of 20 and the Group of 33. The G-20 put the
developed countries on notice that there would be no more concessions
in terms of market access if no significant reductions were made in
unfair domestic support for agriculture. The G-33 demanded that certain
products considered vital to agricultural production and employment '
'special products' (SPs) ' be exempted from tariff liberalization. They
also wanted the right to raise tariffs and resort to other measures '
'special safeguard mechanisms' (SSMs) ' to protect their products from
surges of agricultural imports. When the EU and the U.S. refused to
compromise on these issues, the WTO's Fifth Ministerial Meeting in
Cancun in 2003 collapsed.
The Ministerial Declaration of the Sixth Ministerial Meeting of the WTO
in Hong Kong in December 2005 recognized the right of developing
countries to designate SPs and institute SSMs. However, the U.S.'s
backtracking on this commitment as well as its refusal to significantly
reduce its domestic subsidies led to the collapse of the Doha Round of
negotiations in July 2006. Developing countries simply could not
provoke more discontent among their peasant populations by opening
their markets even more in exchange for cosmetic reductions in the
massive subsidies provided by the EU and U.S. to their agricultural
sectors.
Farmers' Internationale?
The suicide of the Korean farmer Lee Kyung Hae at the barricades in
Cancun in September 2003 was a milestone in the development of farmers'
resistance globally. Committed under a banner that read 'WTO Kills
Farmers,' Lee's aim was to draw international attention to the number
of suicides by farmers in countries subjected to liberalization. He
succeeded only too well. The event shocked the WTO delegates, who
observed a minute of silence in Lee's memory. By adding to what was
already a charged atmosphere, it was certainly a key factor in the
unraveling of the talks.
In December 2005, invoking Lee's sacrifice, hundreds of Korean farmers
tried to break through police lines in an effort to storm the Hong Kong
Convention Center. Some 900 protesters, the bulk of them Korean
farmers, were arrested.
Lee and the Korean farmers protesting in Hong Kong were members of Via
Campesina, an international federation of farmers that was established
in the mid-1990s. Since its founding, Via Campesina ' literally
translated as the 'Peasants' Path' ' has become known as one of the
most militant opponents of the WTO and bilateral and multilateral free
trade agreements. While there are other international farmers'
networks, Via is distinguished by its position that small farmers must
not only fight to survive in the current global system of
corporate-dominated industrial farming, they should lead the process to
transform or replace the current system. Commenting on the vision of
Jose Bove ' the famous French activist who dismantled a MacDonald's
restaurant in his hometown of Millau, France ' and other Via leaders,
one progressive journal has described the aim of the organization as
the creation of a 'Farmers' Internationale' in much the same way that
Communist and Social Democratic groups sought to establish the
Communist International and Socialist International to unite workers in
the 20th century. (8)
The main battle cry of Via Campesina, whose coordinating center is
located in Indonesia, is 'WTO Out of Agriculture' and its alternative
program is 'Food Sovereignty.' Food Sovereignty means first and
foremost the immediate adoption of policies that favor small producers.
This would include, according to Indonesian farmer Henry Saragih, Via's
coordinator, and Ahmad Ya'kub, Deputy for Policy Studies of the
Indonesian Peasant Union Federation (FSPI), 'the protection of the
domestic market from low-priced imports, remunerative prices for all
farmers and fishers, abolition of all direct and indirect export
subsidies, and the phasing out of domestic subsidies that promote
unsustainable agriculture.' (9)
Via's program, however, goes beyond the adoption of pro-smallholder
trade policies. It also calls for an end to the Trade-Related
Intellectual Property Rights regime, which allows corporations to
patent plant seeds, thus appropriating for private profit what has
evolved through the creative interaction of the natural world with
human communities over eons. Seeds and all other plant genetic
resources should be considered part of the common heritage of humanity,
the group believes, and not be subject to privatization.
Agrarian reform, long avoided by landed elites in countries like the
Philippines, is a central element in Via's platform, as is sustainable,
ecologically sensitive organic or biodynamic farming by small peasant
producers. The organization has set itself apart from both the 'First
Green Revolution,' which was based on chemical-intensive agriculture,
and the 'Second Green Revolution,' which is driven by genetic
engineering (GE). The disastrous environmental side effects of the
first are well known, says Via, which means all the more that the
precautionary principle must be rigorously applied to the second, to
avoid negative health and environmental outcomes.
The opposition to GE-based agriculture has created a powerful link
between farmers and consumers who are angry at corporations for
marketing genetically modified commodities without proper labeling,
thus denying consumers a choice. In the European Union, a solid
alliance of farmers, consumers, and environmentalists prevented the
import of GE-modified products from the United States for several
years. Although the EU has cautiously allowed in a few GE imports since
2004, 54 per cent of European consumers continue to think GE food is
'dangerous.' (10) Opposition to other harmful processes such as food
irradiation has also contributed to the tightening of ties between
farmers and consumers, large numbers of whom now think that public
health and environmental impact should be more important determinants
of consumer behavior than price.
More and more people are beginning to realize that local production and
culinary traditions are intimately related, and that this relationship
is threatened by corporate control of food production, processing,
marketing, and consumption. This is why Jose Bove's justification for
dismantling a MacDonald's resonated widely in Asia: 'When we said we
would protest by dismantling the half-built McDonald's in our town,
everybody understood why ' the symbolism was so strong. It was for
proper food against malbouffe [awful standardized food], agricultural
workers against multinationals'he extreme right and other nationalists
tried to make out it was anti-Americanism, but the vast majority knew
it was no such thing. It was a protest against a form of production
that wants to dominate the world.' (11)
A Class-for-Itself?
Small farmers have long been viewed as a doomed class by many
economists, technocrats, policymakers, and urban intellectuals. Once
regarded as passive objects to be manipulated by elites, they are now
resisting the capitalist, socialist, and 'developmentalist' paradigms
that would consign them to ruin. They have become what Karl Marx
described as a politically conscious 'class-for-itself.' And even as
peasants refuse to 'go gently into that good night,' to borrow a line
from Dylan Thomas, developments in the 21st century are revealing
traditional pro-development visions to be deeply flawed. The escalating
protests of peasant groups such as Via Campesina, are not a return to
the past. As environmental crises multiply and the social dysfunctions
of urban-industrial life pile up, we realize that the farmers' movement
has relevance not only to peasants, but to everyone who is threatened
by the catastrophic consequences of obsolete modernist paradigms for
organizing production, community, and life.
*Walden Bello is Executive Director of Focus on the Global South, a
Bangkok-based research and advocacy institute, and a Professor of
Sociology at the University of the Philippines at Diliman.
Notes
1. Oxfam International, Rigged Rules and Double Standards (Oxford: Oxfam International, 2002), p. 112
2. Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), 'Agriculture, Trade, and
Food Security: Issues and Options in the WTO Negotiations from the
Perspective of Developing Countries, Vol 2: Country Case Studies'
(Rome: FAO, 2000); cited in Aileen Kwa, 'A Guide to the Doha Work
Program: the 'Development Agenda' Undermines Development,' Focus on the
Global South, Bangkok, January 2003
3. Aileen Kwa, Ibid
4. C. Fred Bergsten et al., China: the Balance Sheet (New York: Public Affairs, 2006), p. 36
5. Meenakshi Raman, 'Effects of Agricultural Liberalization:
Experiences of Rural Producers in Developing Countries,' Third World
Network, Penang, Malaysia, undated
6. Utsa Patnaik, 'External Trade, Domestic Employment, and Food
Security: Recent Outcomes of Trade Liberalization and Neo-Liberal
Economic Reforms in India,' Paper presented at the International
Workshop on Policies against Hunger III, Berlin, Oct. 20-22, 2004, p. 1
7. C. Fred Bergsten et al., China: What the World Needs to Know now
about the Emerging Superpower (Washington: Center for Strategic and
International Studies and Institute for International Economics, 2006),
pp. 40-41
8. Interview with Jose Bove, 'A Farmers' International?,' New Left Review, No. 12, Nov-Dec 2001
9. Henry Saragih and Ahmad Ya'kub, 'The Impact of WTO and Alternatives
to Agricultural Trade,' Paper presented at the Regional Conference on
Agricultural Negotiations in the WTO: Implications for Trade and
Agriculture in East Asia, Hong Kong, January 12-14, 2004
10. BBC, 'Trade Battle over GM Food,' Feb. 8, 2006, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4890010.stm
11. Jose Bove, 'A Farmers' International?,' in Tom Mertes, ed., A Movement of Movements? (London: Verso, 2004), pp. 141-142
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