Title: Food Aid Lecture
1US Food Aid Background Trends and Key Policy
Issues on the Cusp of a Farm Bill
Chris Barrett C.H. Dyson School of Applied
Economics Management and Department of
Economics, Cornell University November 19, 2012
Community and International Nutrition Seminar
Series Cornell University
2Background trends
- 1. Increasing emergency-affected populations
- Natural disasters and affected persons have
increased significantly over the past two
generations. - The global number of internally displaced persons
(IDPs) has grown from 20 to 27 mn/yr, 1989-91 to
2009-11.
3Background trends
- 2. Globalization of food markets
- Food aid was originally a surplus disposal
program. Take govt-held surpluses generated by
farm price support programs and give them away
beyond the US marketshed. - But virtually no place lies outside the
marketshed today. Even in land-locked developing
countries, commercial food imports have grown gt
10-fold in the past 20 years! - This has led to a rapid transition towards
cash-/market-based food assistance, especially
since 2004 tsunami.
4Background trends
- 3. We have entered a high food price regime
- For a variety of reasons, food demand growth has
outpaced supply growth for the past decade. The
result is historically high (inflation-adjusted)
food prices for the indefinite future. - This makes food aid expensive.
5Background trends
- 4. More attention to micronutrient deficiencies
- The Green Revolution and globalizing food markets
have steadily reduced undernutrition. - But low micronutrient (mineral/vitamin) intake
increasingly recognized as equally serious,
especially for children due to irreversible
effects - Hence growing attention to food aid quality (2011
GAO and Tufts/USAID studies).
6US Food Aid
Much Has Changed In US Food Aid Already For
nearly 60 years, the USG has been the worlds
largest donor of food aid for strategic,
economic and moral purposes. Still 50-60 of
global flows each year. Food aid volumes have
fallen sharply over the past decade-plus, from
the US and globally due to trends described
already. Huge reorientation from
monetized program food aid (Title I) to
emergency and project (Title II) food aid, again
in response to the trends described.
7Key policy issues
- 7. Timeliness (Golden Hour principle)
- Delays are expensive and deadly (2004-5 Niger
example). - Most losses from disasters are post-exposure.
Rapid, appropriate response matters enormously to
recovery. - Farm Bill still sharply limits local and regional
purchases (LRP) in US food aid programs although
they account for 82 of non-US food aid today. - Prepositioning the best feasible Title II option
now. But 25-40 more expensive than regular
shipments (GAO 07). - Big gains from LRP USDA LRPP and USAID EFSP
projects delivered 62 (14 weeks) faster, on
average, than shipments from US. - Hard earmark on non-emergency funds ties FFPs
hands big risks of 4th quarter emergency
response interruptions.
8Key policy issues
- 7. Cost-effectiveness
- Increasing need with decreasing resources. Need
to do more with less. - Need to reduce unnecessary (non-commodity) costs
transport is huge (especially with cargo
preference rules adds 150mn/year to costs
but rolled back in July). - USDA LRPPP/USAID EFSP reduced cost of delivered
grains by gt50 on average. - Monetization just 58-76 cost recovery hugely
wasteful (GAO). The rest of the world abandoned
monetization years ago and OMB recommended ending
it back in 2002. Yet non-emergency Title II
monetization has grown from 28 in 1996 to 74 in
2010. Better options exist community development
funds (Foreign Ops), 202e, Title I buybacks.
9Key policy issues
- 7. Food Aid Quality
-
- Need to address more varied nutritional needs
than simply filling a dietary energy supply
shortfall. - Especially important in light of the First 1000
Days Initiative - Need to match commodity choices to assessed needs
to achieve cost-effective delivery of needed
nutrients (what is cheap in /MT terms not always
cheap in /nutrient terms) - Increased attention to food aid quality LRP has
proved equal to shipments from US in food quality
w/much greater capacity to resolve quality
problems at delivery than with shipments from the
US.
10Key policy issues
- 7. Flexibility
-
- With greater food market access and superior
timeliness and cost-effectiveness of commercial
channels, cash/vouchers often preferred to food. - Need response analysis (i) to identify
appropriate form/ source of assistance, (ii) to
ensure assistance doesnt disrupt markets on
which the poor and devt most depend. - But need options LRP just 2 of US food aid vs.
82 for ROW. Mainstream LRP not make it a
separate program. - Slow/awkward movement toward budget integration
already achieved in Canada, EU and other key
donor countries, moving food aid into
international development budgets and out of farm
policy and agriculture budgets.
11Farm Bill 2012
- 7. Senate
- Senate passed a bipartisan Farm Bill capping
monetization, making LRP permanent and slightly
reducing the hard earmark for non-emergency
food aid. - Far from ideal, but progress nonetheless
- House
- No Farm Bill vote yet. Ag Committee passed a bill
that drops LRP, reinforces monetization and the
hard earmark. - If no Farm Bill?
- USAID authority for new programming expires Dec.
31. At that point gt50 of the worlds food aid
flows cease!
12Conclusion
US food aid still essential to global emergency
response. The Farm Bill offers a chance to
further adapt US policy to all that has changed
in the world of food aid. But the current House
version is a step backwards and perhaps no bill
at all. Key policy issues for the 2012 Farm
Bill - timeliness - cost-effectiveness -
food aid quality - flexibility Implications -pe
rmanent, mainstreamed LRP -
reduced/constrained monetization - relaxed
Title II non-emergency hard earmark
13Thank you for your time and interest!