In spite of the best efforts of sustainable agriculture, environmental, and healthy food advocates over the past two years to reform U.S. farm policy, the bill recently passed by Congress lacks fundamental reform. Although the bill includes some environmental and healthy food system improvements over existing legislation, the system of commodity subsidies remains intact, and it is these subsidies, together with biofuels subsidies and mandates embodied in the farm bill and energy legislation, that drive the basic structure of the U.S. farm and food system.
To break the farm-block stranglehold on farm and food policy the next time around, we need a need a new vision of agriculture: one that recognizes that farmers produce more than just food, feed, fuel, and fiber. We also count on farmers to take care of vast swaths of critically important land. What we need, in short, is a "multifunctionality" vision of agriculture.
Most reform proposals leading up to Congressional farm bill debate throughout 2007 were based on either a market-oriented global competitiveness vision or a sustainable agriculture vision of American agriculture. These are competing visions, but groups representing both visions were calling for drastic curtailment -- or in some cases, virtual elimination -- of the commodity subsidy programs. They failed, of course.
The Washington, D.C.-based Sustainable Agriculture Coalition reports farm bill accomplishments in a number of areas, including enhanced funding for conservation, technical and financial assistance for farmers wanting to convert to organic agriculture methods, and increased funding for promotion of farmers markets and local food enterprises.
But the Congressional farm block prevailed in protecting agribusiness and large-farm interests by retaining the commodity subsidy system. The final bill did not even include much in the way of stronger caps on payments to large farmers and landowners. Moreover, Congress added a permanent disaster program that will further encourage crop systems that are ecologically inappropriate to some regions.
In contrast to the U.S., the European Union has succeeded in carrying out some fundamental reforms in its Common Agricultural Policy over the last decade. Reforms include the new, single-farm payment system, accompanied by stronger environmental cross-compliance measures, adopted following the comprehensive midterm review of the CAP in 2003. The E.U. still has a long way to go in enacting needed reforms, but reforms it has made are due in no small part to a new E.U. consensus reached by the late-1990s that policies should be based on a multifunctionality vision of agriculture. Many elements of the U.S. sustainable agriculture vision constitute, essentially, a multifunctionality perspective, but that perspective has yet to be adopted by the broad American body politic and political activists.
The multifunctionality vision is gaining wider acceptance beyond the E.U. The recently released "Executive Summary of the Synthesis Report of the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD)" calls for a multifunctionality approach to hunger, poverty, environmental, and equity problems throughout the world. The IAASTD was a global, intergovernmental initiative launched in 2007, under the co-sponsorship of the FAO, GEF, UNDP, UNEP, UNESCO, the World Bank, and WHO. The process involved 900 participants from 110 countries.
The IAASTD report describes what it means by multifunctionality:
Multifunctionality is used solely to express the inescapable interconnectedness of agriculture's different roles and functions. The concept of multifunctionality recognizes agriculture as a multi-output activity producing not only commodities (food, feed, fibers, agrofuels, medicinal products and ornamentals), but also non-commodity outputs such as environmental services, landscape amenities and cultural heritages.The Executive Summary of the Synthesis Report states that the challenges for agricultural knowledge, science, and technology (AKST) posed by multifunctional agriculture include:
The working definition proposed by OECD [Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development], which is used by the IAASTD, associates multifunctionality with particular characteristics of the agricultural production process and its outputs: (i) multiple commodity and non-commodity outputs are jointly produced by agriculture; and (ii) some of the non-commodity outputs may exhibit the characteristics of externalities or public goods, such that markets function poorly or are non-existent.
- How to improve social welfare and personal livelihoods in the rural sector and enhance multiplier effects of agriculture
- How to empower marginalized stakeholders to sustain the diversity of agriculture and food systems, including their cultural dimensions
- How to provide safe water, maintain biodiversity, sustain the natural resource base and minimize the adverse impacts of agricultural activities on people and the environment
- How to maintain and enhance environmental and cultural services while increasing sustainable productivity and diversity of food, fiber, and biofuel production
- How to manage effectively the collaborative generation of knowledge among increasingly heterogeneous contributors and the flow of information among diverse public and private AKST organizational arrangements
- How to link the outputs from marginalized, rain-fed land into local, national, and global markets
As noted in the IAASTD report, basing agricultural policy on the multifunctionality concept has been controversial. U.S. policy makers and economists often have charged that the E.U.'s multifunctionality language is simply protectionism in disguise. But this ignores the fact that many European policy economists have given very careful attention to reconciliation of trade policies and domestic agricultural policies based on multifunctionality (for example, see references in Dobbs and Pretty). Basing agricultural policy on a multifunctionality vision does not imply abandonment of comparative advantage principles or all-out protectionism. It does imply, however, that a narrow comparative advantage, economic competitiveness vision will not completely drive policy. It implies that the full range of agriculture's multiple functions will be considered in shaping policies.
Unfortunately, though representatives of the U.S. participated in the IAASTD, the U.S. government (along with the governments of Australia and Canada) did not fully approve the Executive Summary of the Synthesis Report. Could that reflect the fact that the global competitiveness vision still implicitly dominates U.S. agricultural and trade policy thinking?
Between now and time for debate on the next U.S. farm bill, we need to develop a multifunctionality policy consensus, like that reflected in E.U. agricultural policies and the IAASTD report. Until the broad public consistently demands more than "commodities" from agriculture, we will continue to have farm bills that make only modest environmental and healthy food improvements, while maintaining status quo policies that prop up industrial agriculture!
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Matthew Dillon Posted 6:59 am
22 May 2008
A few nights ago I gave a talk to a local food-farm group and made a similar case, but particularly focussed on the cultural dimension. The recent success of the local and organic farm movement has relied heavily on new producers migrating from cities, suburbs, and non-agricultural colleges. Many of whom know web site content management better than pasture management. Fine - better to have greenhorns farming than no one farming. But we can't afford to have intergenerational skills and knowledge leaving the farm to be replaced by a new infusion of green blood. It's not only the loss of cultural heritage but also the loss of technical skills - just as important as good soil, water, or seed. Farm policy must support farm succession, and encourage rural youth to stay in their communities to work in food and farm related industries.
- Matthew Dillon
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JMG Posted 7:01 am
22 May 2008
What we need is an agriculture devoted to fertility, food, fiber, feed, and fuel, in that order. Animal feed before SUVs, but food and clothing for people before animal feed, and fertility of the soil before anything else (or all else is lost no matter what).
The 5% Project
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Jonas Posted 9:49 am
22 May 2008
What if these people want to do what we do, that is: have enough to eat, drive cars, and become wealthier through capitalism, just like we've done for over 200 years (a good part of which on their backs, as colonizers)?
Aren't the undertones of this report - a report that is clearly directed at nations that still have a lot of 'pristine' ecosystems left - a bit dubious?
"Poor people should do what wealthy people didn't succeed in doing, i.e. protect the environment and its ecosystem services.
What these poor people should especially not do is become wealthy monocultural farmers who can compete on a global market currently dominated by the US and Europe."
Sometimes discourses about "sustainable development" can become a new form of imperialism or simply economic protectionism.
This is the feeling I got when reading the BBC-debate about development versus conservation in the Amazon (I think you can still participate, here: Can the Amazon be exploited without being destroyed?). The Europeans taking part in this discussion were all projecting their feelings on Brazilians and were blaming them for not doing enough. The Brazilians of course responded by telling the Europeans that they have more than 80% of their original forest cover left, while Europe has less than 10% left.
Upon which they said: if you're so fond of "sustainable" development, the preservation of cultures and the protection of the Amazon, then pay for it or create a market for it. If you don't, we'll just do as you did: we will develop the routine way.
I understand the growing frustration of many people in the South. They are tired of being the eternal object on which Europeans can project their desires. They are tired of hearing they should especially not follow European lifestyles and economic models, but remain forever exotic cultures trapped in their beautiful, valuable landscapes which we Euros want to preserve.
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Thomas Dobbs Posted 9:39 am
23 May 2008
Thomas L. Dobbs
Professor Emeritus of Economics, South Dakota State University, and W.K. Kellogg Foundation Food & Society Policy Fellow
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Thomas Dobbs Posted 9:53 am
23 May 2008
Thomas L. Dobbs
Professor Emeritus of Economics, South Dakota State University, and W.K. Kellogg Foundation Food & Society Policy Fellow
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Linda Margaret Posted 10:06 pm
24 May 2008
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