Green | October 16, 2011 | 10 comments

Why the food movement should Occupy Wall Street

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JanforGore
I went to the Occupy Wall Street march last week, as part of the NYC food justice delegation. We carried baskets of farmers’ market vegetables and signs reading “Stop Gambling on Hunger” and “Food Not Bonds.” Food justice advocates came out from around the city—urban farmers, gardeners, youth, professors, union members, and community organizers. The vegetables attracted a lot of attention. Food so often attracts a lot of attention—the New York Times is just one of the outlets to focus in recent days on the makeshift kitchen at Zuccotti Park. What was more surprising were all of the puzzled looks we got from the bloggers, photographers, and other marchers who wanted to talk to us. “What’s the connection here with food?” we were asked many times.

The connection of the protests with food, of course, runs from the local to the global, the specific to the ephemeral. Food justice advocates are connecting with Occupy sites all around the country to donate fresh, healthy, local food or to help find kitchen space. On a broader philosophical level, as Mark Bittman writes in the Times, “Whether we’re talking about food, politics, healthcare, housing, the environment, or banking, the big question remains the same: How do we bring about fundamental change?” But there are also clear and specific reasons that all of us working for a just and fair food system, as the food movement should make the connection between our work and Occupy Wall Street explicit and strong.

In the U.S. today, the richest one percent hold 40 percent of the wealth, while almost one in five Americans is on food stamps. Rampant Wall Street speculation on commodities is driving up food costs, small farmers are being driven off their land, and agribusiness holds monopoly control of our seeds and stores. In this climate, the struggle against massive wealth disparities, unregulated financial institutions, and excessive corporate power is our struggle as well. Two points in the Declaration of the Occupation of New York City address the food system. While barely scratching the surface of the potential connections, the protesters have provided an important opening for the food movement. Will we seize it?

Speculation Drives up Food Costs

At the most obvious level, as the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy recently wrote, “Wall Street deregulation has not only made the stock market extremely volatile, it has increased prices and price volatility in agricultural markets.” That is, the relationship between government and Wall Street firms has turned food into commodity like any other, subject to the whims of the market. For decades, only people directly involved in agriculture (e.g., farmers) could freely participate in trade of futures of agricultural commodities (e.g., corn, soy, wheat). Outside speculators were allowed into these markets but with strictly enforced limits to how much they could buy. Futures trading served a practical purpose, giving farmers a guaranteed price for future harvests, and prices stayed relatively stable and reasonable for both buyers and sellers.

But in 2000, a wave of industry-backed deregulation raised and then removed these limits on speculation, which opened commodity markets to a flood of new players—these later included funds controlled by some of the biggest Wall Street firms looking for new investment opportunities after the housing bubble burst. Flooded with new investments unconnected to any direct stake in crop prices, in 2008, the commodity markets exploded, driving up grain prices worldwide. The grain price spikes were catastrophic for millions of people worldwide. Farmers, who sometimes benefit from high grain prices, mostly were no better off, because similarly skyrocketing energy prices also drove up prices of agricultural inputs.

In 2008 and 2009, the UN estimated that an additional 130 million people were driven into hunger by the food price bubble. Spontaneous food riots broke out in dozens of countries where chronic hunger is a reality. Today’s Wall Street protests are not unconnected to those; the effects of food and energy speculation continue in 2011. A study in June by University of Massachusetts Amherst professor Robert Pollin estimates that U.S. gasoline prices are $0.83 higher per gallon due to Wall Street speculation. The CEO of ExxonMobil said he estimates prices are $1.20 to $1.40 higher per gallon. And food commodity prices are as high, or higher, than they were in 2008—while 46 million Americans are now living below the poverty line, struggling with basic expenses like food.

A New Colonialism

Wall Street firms aren’t just gambling on food prices, they have begun speculating on land as well. Alerted to the potential market in agriculture, investors are buying up huge parcels of farmland all over the world, displacing the occupants, and converting subsistence production to cash crops—or, worse, simply leaving the land fallow and waiting for its value to increase. According to international NGO GRAIN, which first reported on this trend in 2008, more than 50 million hectares of land has been transferred from farmers to corporations since 2009. “Land grabs” have affected tens of thousands of people around the world who have been driven off their land–often violently–with little or no compensation, given no say in the process, and left with no recourse. For most of them, land is their livelihood; without it, the future is bleak.

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10 comments // Why the food movement should Occupy Wall Street

  • JanforGore
    • +1
      JanforGore  
    • Access to food and potable water are being denied to people globally including right here in the US. The core of our existence (the seed) is now owned by multinational corporations. This isn't just about democracy, this is about morality and responsibility. RW Republicans and those who constantly scream about morality and taking responsibility now call people UNAmerican for standing up for these inherent rights? It shows they haven't got a CLUE beyond their ideological biases that have poisoned their minds to reality.

    • 7 months ago
  • letsliveinpeace
  • mhaarts
  • ClassicalGas
  • percipi224
    • +1
      percipi224  
    • That is the beauty of this movement. All the issues are coming together under one banner. one of this months Nations was all about food.

    • 7 months ago
  • VoyagerFilms
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • +5
      JanforGore  
    • From fossil fuel prices, to deforestation, to climate change, to poverty, to water access/quality, to hunger, to health, to the industrialization of our agriculture and its seeds, food, (it's growth, pricing, distribution, movement and access) are at the core of what we must seek to change for the future. The disconnect people have when they look at a plate of food in not knowing its sources and how it got there and what has been sacrificed in that process that effects their and their child's future and health is something people need to know about because it affects their lives in so many ways.

      And now as we see more colonialization through land grabs and more subsidizing of corn (i.e.Monsanto) for use as biofuel which is exacerbating deforestation/climate change and world hunger, it is indeed the investment markets that are accountable for the misery so many around the world and farmers in our country are going through. Policies that pollute this planet with pesticides and poisons for profit, push prices up through speculation and keep access from those who really need it in order to facilitate trade agreements that perpetuate dependence on U.S GMO aid in lieu of food sovereignty to shut out small farmers and benefit unregulated big ag companies (i.e. Monsanto, Cargill) is at the heart of this struggle.

      When people have equal access to seeds they can save to preserve biodiversity, access to healthy food and land to grow it on in ways that enrich not strip the soil and access to potable water they do not need to walk hours to collect it facilitates health (both for all species and our planet,) education, opportunity and breaking the chains of perpetual /generational misery, poverty and pollution. This is the exemplification of social justice and humanity.

    • 7 months ago
  • artemis6
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