Matt Homer | Washington | March 29
IPS - Ballooning food prices around the world are prompting a reevaluation of the underpinnings of aid practices that many analysts consider to be inefficient and, in some cases, counterproductive.
And while many hope rising prices will force changes in the way food aid is administered, it also appears this could further entrench current practices.
At least two key food aid providers, the World Food Programme (WFP) of the United Nations and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), warn their current budgets can't keep up with rising costs. The WFP says it is short more than 500 million dollars and has issued an emergency appeal to donors, noting that the cost of its food purchases has risen 55 percent since June 2007.
The problem relates to two factors, says Sophia Murphy, a senior advisor at the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy. The first is "less surplus, so less in-kind food to ship." Countries like the United States are less able to donate domestically grown products because of tightening supply related to increasing demand for grains in Asia and expanding biofuel production in the West.
High demand and low stockpiles have led to increased prices, which in turn has reduced the amount of food that aid organisations can afford to purchase. Murphy says this second factor has been particularly problematic for those buying food with U.S. dollars, which has seen its value steadily decline. "Hence the crisis for the WFP -- they get about 50 percent of their resources from the U.S., and that money is not buying enough food," she told IPS.