Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Robert McNamara's Second Vietnam - The Marcos Connection (Updated)



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BAYAN KO by Freddie Aguilar <--- click to play song.

”Bayan Ko” by KUH LEDESMA <--click to play song.


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Neocolonialism - The dominance of strong nations over weak nations, not by direct political control (as in traditional colonialism), but by economic and cultural influence.


"The chief business of America is business" - President Calvin Coolidge, 1925


"The glory of the United States is business" - Wendell L. Willkie, 1936



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One belief -- in the minds of some fellow Filipinos-- is that we concentrated on import substitution manufacturing rather than go into export manufacturing and thus, we are poor. 



To those of us with short memories, be reminded the Marcos Dictatorship entertained going into heavy industrialization, which the International Monetary Fund (IMF) & The World Bank (WB) discouraged; and instead Marcos was effectively made to pursue export manufacturing --via the establishment of Export Processing Zones ( EPZs ) --as the below article by Prof. Walden Bello alluded to.

(NOTE: Very comprehensive coverages of this IMF/WB influence and control of our homeland can be found in the books: DEVELOPMENT DEBACLE: The World Bank in the Philippines by Walden Bello (Institute for Food and Development Policy, 1982) and MORTGAGING THE FUTURE - The World Bank and IMF in the Philippines edited by Vivencio R. Jose (Foundation for Nationalist Studies,1982) - I do not know if these books are still available.

Marcos at the end of the day has to follow the dictates of the IMF/WB to keep and maintain his absolute power in the homeland, i.e. his financial and political powers. To think of Marcos now is to think of a lost opportunity for our homeland and for his chance to greatness. Also, to think of Marcos is to be reminded that his regime started our perennial and worsening descent to national economic misery, to the export of our countrymen as OFWs (actually mostly women) due to lack of jobs at home and to social immorality in the form of systemic corruption, etc.


(The period here brought back my memory to 1977 when I underwent a panel interview by managers at ESSO (Philippines) and was asked my personal thoughts regarding our homeland establishing a petrochemical complex. The question was not really surprising since I was applying for a marketing job that would cover the Asian region. I was quite politicized by then, was working as a Corporate Planner and just finished my MBA, so I was ready to bullshit and play along to sing the song they want to hear, i.e. that such a project is not right for our country. I got the job but it took them two months to belatedly call me twice; I have already accepted/started on another job offer from a previous employer. Anyway, I really enjoyed the interview and was excited but, in retrospect, I do not think I can last playing along in such a job).


- Bert




"I sincerely believe that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies." - Thomas Jefferson, 1816




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The conventional view of Robert McNamara, who passed away a few days ago, is that after serving as the chief engineer of the disastrous U.S. war in Vietnam, he went on in 1968, to serve as president of the World Bank. In this way, he sought to salve his troubled conscience by delivering development assistance to poor countries. The reality is, as usual, more complex. - Walden Bello 





Walden Bello July 13, 2009
Editor: John Feffer



Development from Above?

As president of the Bank, the world's premier channel for multilateral aid, McNamara did quadruple the institution's lending portfolio to $12 billion. The key beneficiaries, however, were authoritarian dictatorships. Indeed, the rise to hegemony of authoritarian regimes in the developing world cannot be separated from the massive funding that the World Bank under McNamara provided them. By the late 1970s, five of the top seven recipients of World Bank aid were military, presidential-military, or military-controlled regimes: Indonesia, Brazil, South Korea, Turkey, and the Philippines.


Why did the Bank under McNamara feel a special affinity to military-dominated regimes? A major reason stems from McNamara's own background. He was one of the prototypes of the "technocrat," a term coined in the early 1960s to refer to the seemingly apolitical practitioner of the science of political and economic management. As chief executive of the Ford Motor Company and later head of the Defense Department, McNamara ran organizations that were hierarchical and non-democratic in structure. Not surprisingly, he was susceptible to the rhetoric of authoritarian regimes that promised to sanitize the political arena in order, according to them, to allow economic managers the space to modernize the country.


The Marcos Connection
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos was one of the leaders who most successfully cultivated the image of bringing "development from above." In 1972, he imposed martial law in order, in his words, to "break the democratic deadlock" that had become a barrier to development. "All that people ask," Marcos explained, "is some kind of authority that can enforce the simple law of civil society. Only an authoritarian system will be able to carry forth the mass consent and to exercise the authority necessary to implement new values, measures, and sacrifices."



Skillfully deploying a cadre of technocrats to impress the World Bank president, Marcos won McNamara over to backing his regime in a major way. The country was upgraded to what the Bank called a "country of concentration." Between 1950 and 1972, the Philippines received a meager $326 million in Bank assistance. In contrast, between 1973 and 1981, the Bank funneled more than $2.6 billion into the country. Whereas prior to martial law, the Philippines ranked about 30th among recipients of Bank loans, by 1980 it placed eighth among 113 developing countries. 

In return for this massive increase in aid, the Bank was given carte blanche to forge a comprehensive economic development plan for the Philippines. The two pillars of the strategy were "rural development" and "export oriented industrialization."




Containing the Countryside
"Rural development" was the Bank's response to the agricultural crisis. The centerpiece of the strategy was increasing the productivity of small farmers through the delivery of "technological packages" and upgrading agricultural support services like credit systems. Rural development, however, had implications that went beyond improved efficiency.



As McNamara explained to the Bank's board of governors, the strategy would "put the emphasis not on redistribution of income and wealth — as justified as that may be in our member countries — but rather on increasing the productivity of the poor, thereby providing for an equitable sharing in the benefits of growth." In short, rural development was partly counterinsurgency, directed at defusing the appeal of the revolutionary movement among the restive rural masses. 


It was, as one development specialist close to the Bank described it, "defensive modernization" which, if successful, will create a smallholder sector closely integrated with the national economy. Bank projects will encourage subsistence farmers to become small-scale market producers. With economic ties to other sectors, the farmers will be loath to link their interests to those not yet modernized and will hesitate to disrupt the national economy for fear of losing their own markets.


Export-oriented Industrialization
When it came to industry, McNamara pushed Marcos and other World Bank clients to "turn their manufacturing enterprises away from the relatively small markets associated with import substitution toward the much larger opportunities flowing from export promotion." Quotas were to be eliminated and tariffs brought down to expose protected local industries to the winds of international competition; exporters were to be given incentives; export processing zones were to be set up; and wages were to be kept low to attract foreign investors. 



The World Bank shot down a plan by Marcos' more nationalistic technocrats to set up "11 big industrial projects," including an integrated steel industry and a petrochemical complex. The Bank did not consider this attempt to create a strategic industrial core to be in line with export promotion.

As in the case with rural development, there was a social logic to export-oriented industrialization. Persisting in industrialization based on the internal market would have meant having to undertake massive income redistribution in order to expand the market necessary to sustain it, a move opposed by the local elite. By instead hitching the industrialization process to growing export markets, the Bank broke the link between industrialization and domestic income redistribution. The cost, however, was intensifying class conflict as governments attempted to keep wages low and exports competitive.



The World Bank vision was grand, but implementation of a project that favored foreign interests and the traditional elites met mass resistance. The project was also dogged by corruption, cronyism, incompetence, and when it came to land reform, lack of political will. Then there was the special problem of Philippine First Lady Imelda Marcos, who wanted to corner more and more World Bank money for her projects. "Mrs. Marcos," one Bank bureaucrat wrote in a briefing paper for McNamara, "has identified herself with a few showcase projects that we consider ineffective and which are a bit of a joke among knowledgeable Filipinos."


Crisis and the Advent of Structural Adjustment
By the early 1980s, the World Bank program was floundering, prompting management to commission political risk analyst William Ascher to assess the situation. Ascher's findings were grim. The Marcos regime was marked by "increasing precariousness" and "the World Bank's imprimatur on the industrial program runs the risk of drawing criticism of the Bank as the servant of multinational corporations and particularly of US economic imperialism."



In a desperate effort to salvage a deteriorating situation, the Bank forced Marcos to appoint a cabinet of technocrats headed by Prime Minister Cesar Virata, its most trusted agent in the country. But the cure that Virata and company administered was worse than the disease. The country was subjected, along with only three other countries that agreed to be guinea pigs, to an experimental Bank program called Structural Adjustment Programs(SAP) that involved the comprehensive liberalization and deregulation of the economy.

The program, one of McNamara's last innovations before he retired in 1981, sought to fully expose developing economies to international market forces in order make them more efficient. In the Philippines, this adjustment entailed bringing down the effective rate of protection for manufacturing from 44 to 20%. Instead of invigorating the economy, however, this shock liberalization combined with the international recession of the early 1980s to bring about deep economic contraction from 1983 to 1986.



Indeed, structural adjustment led not only to deindustrialization; according to one study, it also created so much unemployment that migration patterns changed drastically. The large migration flows to Manila declined, and most migrants could turn only to open access forests, watersheds, and artisanal fisheries. Thus the major environmental effect of the economic crisis was overexploitation of these vulnerable resources.


Adjustment led to a decade of stagnation from which the country never really recovered, even as its neighbors, who were smart enough to avoid being saddled with the program, were registering 6-10% growth rates in 1985-1995.


Familiar Ending
Yet there was one unintended benefit for the Philippines: The economic chaos that structural adjustment provoked was one of the key factors that brought about the ouster of Marcos in the combined civil-military uprising of February 1986.



By that time, McNamara had been out of the Bank for five years. Ensconced in retirement, he must, however, have seen parallels between the last U.S. helicopters leaving Saigon in 1975 and Marcos going into exile in Hawaii on a U.S. aircraft in 1986. The Philippines was McNamara's second Vietnam. Like the first, it was a memory the once-celebrated whiz-kid of the Kennedy administration would probably have preferred to bury.

Walden Bello is a member of the House of Representatives of the Republic of the Philippines and president of the Freedom from Debt Coalition. A retired professor of sociology at the University of the Philippines, he is currently a columnist at Foreign Policy In Focus and a senior analyst at the Bangkok-based analysis and advocacy institute Focus on the Global South. He is the author of 15 books, the most recent of which is The Food Wars (New York: Verso, 2009). He can be reached at waldenbello (at) yahoo (dot) com.
References:
Robert McNamara, i173 Address to Board of Governors (Washington, DC: World Bank, 1974), pp. 2-3.



Robert Ayres, "Breaking the Bank," Foreign Policy, Summer 1981, No. 43, pp.111-112.


Robert McNamara, 1975 Address to Board of Governors (Washington, DC: World Bank, 1975), pp. 28-29. World Bank, "Briefing for Visit of Mrs. Imelda Marcos: the Urban Sector in the Philippines,"


Memo from Gregory Votaw to Robert McNamara, Washington, DC, Nov. 18, 1975, p. 4.


World Bank, "Political and Administrative Bases for Economic Policy in the Philippines," Memorandum from William Ascher to Larry Hinkle, Washington, DC, Nov. 6, 1980, p. 2.


Wilfredo Cruz and Robert Repetto, The Environmental Effects of Stabilization and Structural Adjustment (Washington, DC: World Resources Institute, 1992), p. 48.
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Monday, July 20, 2009

What You Don't Know About Gaza


January 8, 2009
Op-Ed Contributor

What You Don’t Know About Gaza

Editors' Note Appended

NEARLY everything you’ve been led to believe about Gaza is wrong. Below are a few essential points that seem to be missing from the conversation, much of which has taken place in the press, about Israel’s attack on the Gaza Strip.

THE GAZANS Most of the people living in Gaza are not there by choice. The majority of the 1.5 million people crammed into the roughly 140 square miles of the Gaza Strip belong to families that came from towns and villages outside Gaza like Ashkelon and Beersheba. They were driven to Gaza by the Israeli Army in 1948.

THE OCCUPATION The Gazans have lived under Israeli occupation since the Six-Day War in 1967. Israel is still widely considered to be an occupying power, even though it removed its troops and settlers from the strip in 2005. Israel still controls access to the area, imports and exports, and the movement of people in and out. Israel has control over Gaza’s air space and sea coast, and its forces enter the area at will. As the occupying power, Israel has the responsibility under the Fourth Geneva Convention to see to the welfare of the civilian population of the Gaza Strip.

THE BLOCKADE Israel’s blockade of the strip, with the support of the United States and the European Union, has grown increasingly stringent since Hamas won the Palestinian Legislative Council elections in January 2006. Fuel, electricity, imports, exports and the movement of people in and out of the Strip have been slowly choked off, leading to life-threatening problems of sanitation, health, water supply and transportation.

The blockade has subjected many to unemployment, penury and malnutrition. This amounts to the collective punishment — with the tacit support of the United States — of a civilian population for exercising its democratic rights.

THE CEASE-FIRE Lifting the blockade, along with a cessation of rocket fire, was one of the key terms of the June cease-fire between Israel and Hamas. This accord led to a reduction in rockets fired from Gaza from hundreds in May and June to a total of less than 20 in the subsequent four months (according to Israeli government figures). The cease-fire broke down when Israeli forces launched major air and ground attacks in early November; six Hamas operatives were reported killed.

WAR CRIMES The targeting of civilians, whether by Hamas or by Israel, is potentially a war crime. Every human life is precious. But the numbers speak for themselves: Nearly 700 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed since the conflict broke out at the end of last year. In contrast, there have been around a dozen Israelis killed, many of them soldiers. Negotiation is a much more effective way to deal with rockets and other forms of violence. This might have been able to happen had Israel fulfilled the terms of the June cease-fire and lifted its blockade of the Gaza Strip.

This war on the people of Gaza isn’t really about rockets. Nor is it about “restoring Israel’s deterrence,” as the Israeli press might have you believe.

Rashid Khalidi, a professor of Arab studies at Columbia, is the author of the forthcoming “Sowing Crisis: The Cold War and American Dominance in the Middle East."

Editors' Note: January 30, 2009
An Op-Ed article on Jan. 8, on misperceptions of Gaza, included an unverified quotation. A former Israeli Defense Forces chief of staff, Moshe Yaalon, was quoted as saying in 2002 that “the Palestinians must be made to understand in the deepest recesses of their consciousness that they are a defeated people.” This quotation, while cited widely, does not appear in the Israeli newspaper interview to which it is usually attributed. Its original source has not been found, and thus it should not have appeared in the article.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/08/opinion/08khalidi.html

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Population Control - Poverty and Its Consequences (Updated 12/14/2012)


“There is no literate population in the world that is poor; there is no illiterate population that is anything but poor.” – John Kenneth Galbraith, Kenesian economist, 2oth century liberal intellectual (1908- 2006)

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Hi All,

Population size has been an issue then and now in the homeland and talking about us native Filipinos, we go where the American wind blows. Given the fierce ideological battles in U.S. elections thanks in a way to the "birth control and abortion" debates; we natives copy and import, of course, with encouragement and support from interested U.S. government agencies and American/other foreign business interests, the same to limit the birth rate and proliferation of the pesky Filipino natives roaming the streets and everywhere. 

As a Chinoy once wrote me: "Iyang mga palamunin."  I see all these foreigners and resident aliens wanting to take over and claim our garden of paradise. They, in fact, have started to do so, thanks to our coopting rulers.

I recently read a Filipino blogger allude to the rich as practicing birth control in many ways. Of course! Only those with income above the minimum can have foresight come into play. History has shown for example that indeed the secure middle and upper classes of Europe's society and not the masses started the trend toward reduced fertility. 

Not poverty and disease, but improved living conditions and rising aspirations motivated the trend toward birth regulation. Funny, now many affluent societies worry about their declining population and some provide financial incentives for their own kind to go forth and multiply.

In our past and present Philippine society, our Christian religion, particularly the predominant Catholic variety, is expectedly dogmatic about its position on birth control/contraception. To most of its practicing faithful, the religious beliefs are so compelling and have accepted --like the Mormons, the Amish, certain Jewish and Muslims groups, etc.--the dictates of the gods, I mean, their God as governing intimate aspects of their private lives. (I gather the Mormons have now stopped the ban on contraceptions, I'll check with Mitt Romney.) 

Without going any further and getting more off-track, I say that religions, ancient and modern, throughout history have a lot to say about sexual activity and marriage for various reasons,such as survival of group/sect, an expansionary state, etc. And when the almost innate fear of supernatural justice is triggered, people will go to almost any length to obey what priests/preachers or rulers tell them is the gods' will.

Back home, It is high-time for the Catholic Church to appreciate that religious,dogmatic arguments against artificial birth control are not anymore so marketable in a growing urbanized/secularized, though still mostly, agricultural/rural-minded society . 

The Catholic hierarchy and laity have to accept and realize this fact. Instead, they should expose/highlight the myths against the realities that purely economic rationalizations without the required fundamental and radical changes-- thanks to the ruling class who were/are tutored by foreign interests --applied to our current state of the country will not solve the hunger and poverty of the native Malay Filipino in the homeland.

- Bert 12/14/2012


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Almost two centuries ago, Rev. Robert Malthus wrote his classic and regressive essay "A Summary View of the Principle of Population, (1830)" on population and food, a sort of an earlier "limits to growth" of the 1970's Club of Rome

Of course, let us remember that the pastor was talking of an agricultural society of his time which, unfortunately, so happens to be still the kind of society for us native Filipinos in our homeland.  Malthus theorized that population grows in geometric progression while food supply from the soil does not; and therefore if unchecked, can lead to hunger.

Malthus wrote that population can only be checked or controlled either by "preventive" check or "positive" check. Overall he saw all these checks to be about moral restraint, misery and vice. 

Under preventive he talked of "abstinence from marriage, for a time or permanently;" Being a pastor, he saw these acts as consistent to a life of virtue and happiness (people obviously were not heavy yet into casual or premarital sex then).

Under positive check, Malthus included all natural causes of death brought about by poverty (misery); and man-made, such as war and other excesses (vice). All these thanks to the wise disposition of God, for happiness in life here and the afterlife.

Fast forward today, any serious thinker knows that the Malthusian theory carries some basic truth and several errors. It is true that natural resource is finite. However the theory did not foresee, understandably, the geometric increase in food productivity attributable to technology. It did not foresee the invention of The Pill and did mistakenly assume that poverty will lead to moral restraint (we see population growth rates as faster in poor countries, as present realities in our homeland and similarly poor countries attest).

This Malthusian social doctrine has been continually pushed for decades under various guises and bills since the Marcos Dictatorship in our homeland, thanks to "modern" Malthusian devotees in our homeland (thanks to their Americanized minds.  Since the Marcos Dictatorship, the USAID and the UN have provided about four millions of dollars annually to promote birth control and provide free supplies of contraceptives. 

Now these agencies have learned to save their money and instead pressure our subservient rulers to enforce use by law and have our government buy/import the artificial pills, etc. from their pharmaceutical firmsToday the doctrine is marketed/packaged and euphemistically so-called Reproductive Health (RH) Bill ostensibly to help our women. 

Our fellow native, subservient Filipino proponents still mouth the same misleading assumptions to instill terrible thoughts of overpopulation in our land -- a fearsome view that only an illiterate and thus ignorant mass can believe: that only suffering and the threat of suffering can hold back further impoverishment. When it is evidently clears that poverty induces more poverty (and generational poverty), not prudence.

We know that the poorest must live just for the day to survive. Only when income are above minimum can foresight come into play. Our national economy suffered and has vastly deteriorated since our agrultural production goes almost kaput and manufacturing plants disappear, and consequently millions of jobs lost. 

And why?  All these thanks to our traitorous and mendicant rulers signing on to so many disastrous economic treaties and agreements; International Monetary Fund (IMF) & The World Bank (WB), WTO (Serving the Wealthy), Japanese, China, bilateral, etc.and the millstone of our odious foreign debts; whereby each treaty/agreement is an additional expense and misery of the ordinary native, Malay Filipino.

So much endless talk and promises have been made and left undone about alleviating hunger and poverty, internationally and nationally. Let us recognize, especially in our homeland, that poverty causes hunger, that poverty causes a high birth rate and not vice versa, that poverty causes stunted brains and that poverty causes ignorance. 

Let us realize that poverty in our homeland, characterized by the increasing number of hungry Filipinos, is attributable mainly to the institutions that do not serve the common good and the century-old inequitable land distributions still untouched by often promised and unimplemented Agrarian Reform. This latter necessary reform often circumvented by our aristocratic landholders via their presence and control of our  "democratic" Congress, Executive and Judiciary institutions,

To eliminate hunger, we should attack poverty, inequality, and powerlessness. That is especially true as they are the root causes of high fertility and rapid population growth. Providing education for men and women, reducing inequality and increasing living standards have proven to be the best ways to lower fertility.

Below are the 12 Myths and corresponding Realities about the causes of hunger and generational poverty in the world and rings true our homeland.

- Bert 12/12/2012


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ON POVERTY: 12 MYTHS ABOUT HUNGER
by Frances Moore Lappé, Joseph Collins and Peter Rosset, with Luis Esparza 

Why so much hunger?What can we do about it?
To answer these questions we must unlearn much of what we have been taught.
Only by freeing ourselves from the grip of widely held myths can we grasp the roots of hunger and see what we can do to end it. 



Myth 1 - Not Enough Food to Go Around 

Reality:
Abundance, not scarcity, best describes the world's food supply. Enough wheat, rice and other grains are produced to provide every human being with 3,500 calories a day. That doesn't even count many other commonly eaten foods - vegetables, beans, nuts, root crops, fruits, grass-fed meats, and fish. Enough food is available to provide at least 4.3 pounds of food per person a day worldwide: two and half pounds of grain, beans and nuts, about a pound of fruits and vegetables, and nearly another pound of meat, milk and eggs-enough to make most people fat! 


The problem is that many people are too poor to buy readily available food. Even most "hungry countries" have enough food for all their people right now. Many are net exporters of food and other agricultural products.


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Myth 2 - Nature's to Blame for Famine 

Reality:
It's too easy to blame nature. Human-made forces are making people increasingly vulnerable to nature's vagaries. Food is always available for those who can afford it—starvation during hard times hits only the poorest. Millions live on the brink of disaster in south Asia, Africa and elsewhere, because they are deprived of land by a powerful few, trapped in the unremitting grip of debt, or miserably paid. Natural events rarely explain deaths; they are simply the final push over the brink. 


Human institutions and policies determine who eats and who starves during hard times. Likewise, in America many homeless die from the cold every winter, yet ultimate responsibility doesn't lie with the weather. The real culprits are an economy that fails to offer everyone opportunities, and a society that places economic efficiency over compassion.


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Myth 3 - Too Many People 

Reality: Birth rates are falling rapidly worldwide as remaining regions of the Third World begin the demographic transition—when birth rates drop in response to an earlier decline in death rates. Although rapid population growth remains a serious concern in many countries, nowhere does population density explain hunger.


For every Bangladesh, a densely populated and hungry country, we find a Nigeria, Brazil or Bolivia, where abundant food resources coexist with hunger. Costa Rica, with only half of Honduras' cropped acres per person, boasts a life expectancy—one indicator of nutrition —11 years longer than that of Honduras and close to that of developed countries.

Rapid population growth is not the root cause of hunger. Like hunger itself, it results from underlying inequities that deprive people, especially poor women, of economic opportunity and security. Rapid population growth and hunger are endemic to societies where land ownership, jobs, education, health care, and old age security are beyond the reach of most people. Those Third World societies with dramatically successful early and rapid reductions of population growth rates-China, Sri Lanka, Colombia, Cuba and the Indian state of Kerala-prove that the lives of the poor, especially poor women, must improve before they can choose to have fewer children. 


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Myth 4 - The Environment vs. More Food? 

Reality: We should be alarmed that an environmental crisis is undercutting our food-production resources, but a tradeoff between our environment and the world's need for food is not inevitable. Efforts to feed the hungry are not causing the environmental crisis. Large corporations are mainly responsible for deforestation-creating and profiting from developed-country consumer demand for tropical hardwoods and exotic or out-of-season food items


Most pesticides used in the Third World are applied to export crops, playing little role in feeding the hungry, while in the U.S. they are used to give a blemish-free cosmetic appearance to produce, with no improvement in nutritional value.

Alternatives exist now and many more are possible. The success of organic farmers in the U.S. gives a glimpse of the possibilities. Cuba's recent success in overcoming a food crisis through self-reliance and sustainable, virtually pesticide-free agriculture is another good example. Indeed, environmentally sound agricultural alternatives can be more productive than environmentally destructive ones. 



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Myth 5 - The Green Revolution is the Answer 

Reality: The production advances of the Green Revolution are no myth. Thanks to the new seeds, million of tons more grain a year are being harvested. But focusing narrowly on increasing production cannot alleviate hunger because it fails to alter the tightly concentrated distribution of economic power that determines who can buy the additional food. 


That's why in several of the biggest Green Revolution successes—India, Mexico, and the Philippines—grain production and in some cases, exports, have climbed, while hunger has persisted and the long-term productive capacity of the soil is degraded. Now we must fight the prospect of a 'New Green Revolution' based on biotechnology, which threatens to further accentuate inequality. 


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Myth 6 - We Need Large Farms 

Reality: Large landowners who control most of the best land often leave much of it idle. Unjust farming systems leave farmland in the hands of the most inefficient producers. By contrast, small farmers typically achieve at least four to five times greater output per acre, in part because they work their land more intensively and use integrated, and often more sustainable, production systems. 


Without secure tenure, the many millions of tenant farmers in the Third World have little incentive to invest in land improvements, to rotate crops, or to leave land fallow for the sake of long-term soil fertility. Future food production is undermined. On the other hand, redistribution of land can favor production. 

Comprehensive land reform has markedly increased production in countries as diverse as Japan, Zimbabwe, and Taiwan. A World Bank study of northeast Brazil estimates that redistributing farmland into smaller holdings would raise output an astonishing 80 percent. 


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Myth 7 - The Free Market Can End Hunger 

Reality: Unfortunately, such a "market-is-good, government-is-bad" formula can never help address the causes of hunger. Such a dogmatic stance misleads us that a society can opt for one or the other, when in fact every economy on earth combines the market and government in allocating resources and distributing goods. The market's marvelous efficiencies can only work to eliminate hunger, however, when purchasing power is widely dispersed


So all those who believe in the usefulness of the market and the necessity of ending hunger must concentrate on promoting not the market, but the consumers! In this task, government has a vital role to play in countering the tendency toward economic concentration, through genuine tax, credit, and land reforms to disperse buying power toward the poor. 

Recent trends toward privatization and de-regulation are most definitely not the answer.

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Myth 8 - Free Trade is the Answer 

Reality: The trade promotion formula has proven an abject failure at alleviating hunger. In most Third World countries exports have boomed while hunger has continued unabated or actually worsened. While soybean exports boomed in Brazil-to feed Japanese and European livestock-hunger spread from one-third to two-thirds of the population. Where the majority of people have been made too poor to buy the food grown on their own country's soil, those who control productive resources will, not surprisingly, orient their production to more lucrative markets abroad. 


Export crop production squeezes out basic food production. Pro-trade policies like NAFTA and GATT/WTO pit working people in different countries against each other in a 'race to the bottom,' where the basis of competition is who will work for less, without adequate health coverage or minimum environmental standards. Mexico and the U.S. are a case in point: since NAFTA we have had a net loss of 250,000 jobs here, while Mexico has lost 2 million, and hunger is on the rise in both countries. 


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Myth 9 - Too Hungry to Fight for Their Rights 

Reality: Bombarded with images of poor people as weak and hungry, we lose sight of the obvious: for those with few resources, mere survival requires tremendous effort. If the poor were truly passive, few of them could even survive. Around the world, from the Zapatistas in Chiapas, Mexico, to the farmers' movement in India, wherever people are suffering needlessly, movements for change are underway. 


People will feed themselves, if allowed to do so. It's not our job to 'set things right' for others. Our responsibility is to remove the obstacles in their paths, obstacles often created by large corporations and U.S. government, World Bank and IMF policies.


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Myth 10 - More U.S. Aid Will Help the Hungry 

Reality: Most U.S. aid works directly against the hungry. Foreign aid can only reinforce, not change, the status quo. Where governments answer only to elites, our aid not only fails to reach hungry people, it shores up the very forces working against them. 


Our aid is used to impose free trade and free market policies, to promote exports at the expense of food production, and to provide the armaments that repressive overnments use to stay in power.

Even emergency, or humanitarian aid, which makes up only five percent of the total, often ends up enriching American grain companies while failing to reach the hungry, and it can dangerously undercut local food production in the recipient country. It would be better to use our foreign aid budget for unconditional debt relief, as it is the foreign debt burden that forces most Third World countries to cut back on basic health, education and anti-poverty programs.


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Myth 11 - We Benefit From Their Poverty 

Reality: The biggest threat to the well-being of the vast majority of Americans is not the advancement but the continued deprivation of the hungry. Low wages-both abroad and in inner cities at home-may mean cheaper bananas, shirts, computers and fast food for most Americans, but in other ways we pay heavily for hunger and poverty


Enforced poverty in the Third World jeopardizes U.S. jobs, wages and working conditions as corporations seek cheaper labor abroad. In a global economy, what American workers have achieved in employment, wage levels, and working conditions can be protected only when working people in every country are freed from economic desperation.

Here at home, policies like welfare reform throw more people into the job market than can be absorbed-at below minimum wage levels in the case of 'workfare'-which puts downward pressure on the wages of those on higher rungs of the employment ladder. The growing numbers of 'working poor' are those who have part- or full-time low wage jobs yet cannot afford adequate nutrition or housing for their families. 


Educating ourselves about the common interests most Americans share with the poor in the Third World and at home allows us to be compassionate without sliding into pity. In working to clear the way for the poor to free themselves from economic oppression, we free ourselves as well.


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Myth 12 - Curtail Freedom to End Hunger? 

Reality: There is no theoretical or practical reason why freedom, taken to mean civil liberties, should be incompatible with ending hunger. Surveying the globe, we see no correlation between hunger and civil liberties. However, one narrow definition of freedom-the right to unlimited accumulation of wealth-producing property and the right to use that property however one sees fit-is in fundamental conflict with ending hunger. 


By contrast, a definition of freedom more consistent with our nation's dominant founding vision holds that economic security for all is the guarantor of our liberty. Such an understanding of freedom is essential to ending hunger. 



Source: 12 Myths About Hunger based on World Hunger: 12 Myths, 2nd Edition, by Frances Moore Lappé, Joseph Collins and Peter Rosset, with Luis Esparza (fully revised and updated, Grove/Atlantic and Food First Books, Oct. 1998)
Institute for Food and Development Policy BackgrounderSummer 1998, Vol.5, No. 3
1975 - 2005


Source: http://www.foodfirst.org/pubs/backgrdrs/1998/s98v5n3.html


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PLEASE DONATE CORE/FUNDAMENTAL SUBJECT BOOKS TO OUR HOMELAND (i.e. your hometown public schools, Alma Mater, etc.). Those books that you and/or your children do not need or want; or buy books from your local library during its cheap Book Sales. Also, cargo/door-to-door shipment is best.  It is a small sacrifice.  [clean up your closets or garage - donate books.THANKS!]
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The following previous posts and the RECTO READER are essential about us native, Malay Filipinos and are therefore always presented in each new post. Click each to open/read.
  1. WHAT WE FILIPINOS SHOULD KNOW:
  2. WHAT IS NATIONALISM [Filipino Nationalism]?
  3. Our Colonial Mentality and Its Roots 
  4. The Miseducation of the Filipino (Formation of our Americanized Mind)
  5. Jose Rizal - Reformist or Revolutionary?
  6. The Purpose of Our Past, Why Study (Our) History?
  7. Studying and Rethinking Our Philippine History
  8. Globalization (Neoliberalism) – The Road to Perdition in Our Homeland
  9. Resisting Globalization (WTO Agreements)
  10. Virtues of De-Globalization
  11. Our Filipino Kind of Religion
  12. Our Filipino Christianity and Our God-concept
  13. When Our Religion Becomes Evil
THE RECTO READER is presented in several postings. Click each to open/read:
NOTE: Recto's cited cases, examples or issues were of his time, of course; but realities in our homeland in the present and the foreseeable future are/expectedly much, much worse. Though I am tempted to update them with current issues, it's best to leave them as they are since Recto's paradigms about our much deepened national predicament still ring relevant, valid and true. In short, Recto saw the forest and never got lost in the trees.- Bert


  1. THE FILIPINO MIND blog contains 532 published postings you can view, as of December 12, 2012. 
  2. The postings are oftentimes long and a few readers have claimed being "burnt out."  My apologies. The selected topics are not for entertainment but to stimulate deep, serious thoughts per my MISSION Statement and hopefully to rock our boat of  ignorance, apathy, complacency and hopefully lead to active citizenship.
  3. All comments are welcomed for posting at the bottom window. Comments sent by email will also be posted verbatim. However, ANONYMOUS COMMENTS WILL BE IGNORED.
  4. Visit my other website, click --> SCRIBD/TheFilipinoMind, or the SCRIB FEED at the sidebar, or type it on GOOGLE Search to read or download ebooks and PDFs of essays I have uploaded.  Statistics for my associated website:SCRIBD/theFilipinoMind : ALL FREE AND DOWNLOADABLE: 123 documents, 207,458 reads
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  8. Songs on Filipino nationalism: please reflect on the lyrics (messages) as well as the beautiful renditions. Other Filipino Music links at blog sidebar.  Click each to play.: