Crisis Looms as
Corporations Seize Control of Commodities
Barbara L. Minton**
August 02, 2008
Natural News
(NaturalNews) The global food
crisis won't go away any time soon. Capitalism has the average consumer by the
belly. Amid growing signs of famine and outrage, the entire chain of
commodities and resources of the world are now being cornered by giant
corporations. Farmland, water, fertilizer, seed, energy, and most of the basic
necessities of life are falling under corporate control, providing increased
wealth and power to the ruling elite while the rest of humanity struggles.
Commodity scarcity in
Despite the success of the genetically engineered Bt cotton
crops, the trend in India is now back to soybeans because they cost less to
grow and need less fertilizer than cotton.
And it's not just fertilizer that is scarce. Seeds are also
in short supply which is being blamed on agitation that has interfered with
freight train traffic. However, the shortfall in seeds is 60 percent, a level
more indicative of corporate intervention to drive up prices than the actions
of powerless farmers.
As farmers fume, the Wall Street Journal heralds the
whopping 42 percent jump in the fiscal third quarter profits of huge
agriculture giant Archer-Daniels Midland. This increase includes a sevenfold
rise in new income in units that store, transport and grade grains such as
wheat, corn and soybeans.
The soaring profits of fertilizer maker Potash Corporation
of
Similar windfall profits are reported by GMO seed and
herbicide king Monsanto whose last quarterly earnings surged by 45%.
Some onlookers blame the financial speculators for driving
up the prices of commodities related to agriculture as wealthy investors have
piled on looking to cash in on the rising stock prices. And in many ways,
today's commodity market resembles the dot.com boom seen at the turn of the
century, as well as the housing boom now in the throws of its bust.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission recently held a
hearing to investigate the role that index funds and hedge funds are playing in
driving up the prices of agricultural commodities. Total public fund investment
in corn, soybean, wheat, cattle and hogs has risen by 37 billion dollars since
2006. This figure does not include the huge investments of hedge funds which
don't have to make such disclosure. It also doesn't include the massive world
wide investments in farmland made by the wealthy.
The corporate spin is that these investments are helpful to
humanity because they will ultimately result in increased food production at a
time of rising world demand. They cite the need for increased corporate profits
to invest in and develop new technologies that will help farmers improve
productivity. This is how GMO seeds are being driven down the throats of
farmers, who are told that the modified seeds can squeeze even more yield from
each acre of planting.
Farmers in
Corporations blame food shortages and rising prices on the
people of
Of course the other commodity you can't get along without is
water, which is now the focus of huge multinational companies seeking to
privatize water world wide, perhaps even patent it as Monsanto did with seeds.
The fight over water may bring chaos, conflict and misery on a scale never seen
before as corporations and governments go so far as to grab the wells from
under people's houses.
And then there's oil. To produce chemical fertilizer you
must make use of fossil fuel. So rising oil prices and rising food prices are
joined at the hip. The behavior of corporations in the oil business has been so
egregious that there is talk of a windfall profits tax here and abroad.
No, the food crisis will not go away anytime soon.
Sources:
P. Sainath, The
Hindu, "Fertilizing profit, sowing misery"
Bogdan C. Enache,
China Confidential, "Biofuels and the threat of
starvation"
Yahoo Finance
About the author
**Barbara is a school psychologist, a published author in
the area of personal finance, a breast cancer survivor using
"alternative" treatments, a born existentialist, and a student of
nature and all things natural.
naturalnews.com