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  Today's Top StoriesIndian Financial-crash-could-deepen-food-crisis-UN News

 
Financial crash could deepen food crisis: UN

INT40International/EconomyFinancial crash could deepen food crisis: UNRome, Oct 15 DPA Governments should avoid reducing aid to developing countries' agriculture and introducing protectionist trade measures in response to the global financial crisis, the head of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization FAO said Wednesday. Such steps could increase the risk of another food crisis occurring next year, Director-General Jacques Diouf of the Rome-based FAO said in a statement. Another food crisis "could happen despite the record 2008 cereal harvest which is now expected," the statement said. Cereal production this year is forecast to increase 4.9 percent to a record 2.232 billion tons, according to the latest issue of FAO's Crop Prospects and Food Situation report. However, some 36 countries around the world are still in need of external assistance as a result of crop failures, conflict or insecurity, or continuing local high prices, the report noted. "The great uncertainty now enveloping international markets and the threat of global recession may tempt countries towards protectionism and towards reassessing their commitments to international development aid," Diouf said. "It would be unfortunate if this were to be the case and the recently mobilized political will towards enhanced international support for developing country agriculture were to evaporate," he added. Diouf noted that the financial crisis, following hard on the heels of the soaring food price crisis which threw an additional 75 million people into hunger and poverty in 2007 alone, may well deepen the plight of the poor in developing countries. "Last year it was the pan," Diouf said. "Next year could be the fire". Commodity prices are currently dropping, mainly on expectation of favourable crop prospects but also because of a slowing world economy, among other factors. This could mean a cutback in plantings followed by reduced harvests in major exporting countries, FAO said. Given continuing low grains stocks, this scenario could lead to another turn of record food prices next year - a "catastrophe" for millions who by then would be left with little money and no credit, FAO said. The impact of the financial crisis may also be felt in developing countries at the macro level, with further potentially negative effects on agriculture and food security, Diouf said. "Borrowing, bank lending, official development aid, foreign direct investment and workers' remittances - all may be compromised by a deepening financial crisis," he noted. The FAO chief recalled that governments and world leaders agreed at an FAO High-Level Conference on World Food Security held in June that "the international community needs to take urgent and coordinated action to combat the negative impacts of soaring foodprices on the world's most vulnerable countries and populations". At a Group of Eight G8 Summit in Japan a month later, world leaders confirmed their resolve to address global food security as a top priority and demonstrated a growing political will to reverse disturbing trends in global hunger, he noted. "It is vital that this momentum be maintained," Diouf said. "Unless political will and donor pledges are turned into real and immediate action, millions more may fall into deeper poverty and chronic hunger." "The global financial crisis should not make us forget the food crisis. Agriculture needs urgent and sustained attention too to make hunger and rural poverty part of history," he added.--DPAdkg599 Words15101457

 
 
 
 
 
 
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