The
Winner in
By Thornton, Christy
North American Congress on
Posted on: Tuesday, 16 September 2008, 03:00 CDT
via RedOrbit
AS I PREPARED FOR A RECENT TRIP TO ARGENTINA, friends and
colleagues regaled me with tales of the best beef I would ever eat, and shook
their heads with pity when I responded that, as a vegetarian, the only steaks
I'd be eating would be made of tofu. But as I set out to find
In response, rural organizations comprising both large and
small farmers established roadblocks to prevent the transportation of goods to
the cities, creating food shortages throughout the country. The central
government then introduced compensations for small farmers, including tax
rebates, but the rural associations refused to sell goods for export until the
proposal was sent to
So why, in country famous for its beef, was there such a
heated struggle over the soybean? The story begins at the height of the
neoliberal 1990s, when then president Carlos Menem
authorized, for the first time, the production of transgenic soy in
What many now consider an "Argentine model" of soy
production has emerged, combining financialization
and large-scale monoculture, and it is spreading to other countries in the
region. Soy prices are so high that many small farmers have simply sold or
leased their land to large agribusinesses and financial speculators, increasing
the prevalence of the "growing pools" that dominate
This has meant that as the price of land suitable for soy
production has risen dramatically in the last few years, so has the cost of
living in the countryside. And genetically modified soy is among the least
labor-intensive crops, leading some to call soy farming "agriculture
without fanners." One obvious result has been large-scale displacement of campesinos at the new "soy frontier" in provinces
like Chaco,
But another, perhaps even more serious, consequence is
looming. As both the food and financial crises show no signs of abating, the
paradox of this meat-loving country's devotion to soy production becomes clear:
In a country that is the third-largest producer of soybeans in the world, no
one eats the stuff. Indeed, the transgenic variety of soy that takes up more
than half of
During the crisis, many on the left argued that the increase
in export taxes would have done little to reverse this situation, and that the
revenues generated would have only transferred wealth from one sector of
capital to another. But while Argentines now celebrate the end of the battle between
the campo and the government, it is the soy industry that has emerged as the
clear winner in the fight. It is now uncertain what the
Kirchner administration, reeling from this defeat, will now be able to do to
stop the march of transgenic soy across the country.
Financialization and large-scale
monoculture have created a new "Argentine model."
Christy Thornton is NACLA's
director and publisher.
North American Congress on
Source: NACLA Report on the
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