37
Even more shocking, 60 percent of the world’s hungry people are small farmers and 20 percent are
landless agricultural workers” (Angus and Butler 74).
In the period between 1950 and 1984, the grain production globally exceeded the population
size, but after 1984 the world experienced slower growth as grain harvest declined per person by
7% or 0.5% a year (Brown et al. 36). The lack of the cropland area and the drop of irrigation water
per person as well as uneffective use of fertilizers are factors that contribute to a wide food gap. In
the middle of the century, the cropland has increased by 19%, but the population globally grew
132% (Brown et al. 36). This has lead developing nations to lose the ability to feed themselves, and
population growth managed to eliminate farmland from production. In Pakistan, Nigeria, Ethiopia,
and Iran, the population is growing the fastest, but the cropland area per person shrunk by 40%-
50% between 1960 and 1998, and is expected to shrink up to 60%-70% by 2050 (Brown et al. 36).
However, inequality in the production and distribution of food is another contributor to the
world food gap. Giant agricultural corporations operate to maximize their profits by placing food in
areas where people have financial ability to buy it. Therefore, “the daily
availability of food is
about 4,000 calories per person in the North but only 2,500 calories in the sub-Saharan Africa”
(Angus and Butler 74), including unequal distribution within these countries. For example, in the
United States, thirty-six million suffer from hunger and 17 percent of children are under a risk of
developing health related illnesses and cognitive damages due to inadequate nutrition (Angus and
Butler 74). On the other hand, in Canada 40 percent of all food produced is wasted. Consumers
waste about 20
percent of food, whereas the rest goes in harvesting, transportation, packaging,
restaurants, and stores (Angus and Butler 76).
Moreover, studies show other examples of food inequality,
where approximately forty
percent of the grain harvested is converted into beef and fuel. Instead of feeding themselves,
38
humans feed animals and send the corn to factory farms, where cattle will substitute it for grass.
Nonetheless, this seems to be a wasteful method of grain usage because “a single half-pound burger
eaten daily by a consumer in Brazil or the United States uses up enough grain to meet the entire
total daily energy and protein needs of three people in India with a combined grain and milk diet”
(Angus and Butler 75). Similarly, instead of feeding the growing population
of the economically
poor countries, wealthy nations took advantage of corn to burn in it into a biofuel that will turn on
the car engines of their wealthiest consumers. Therefore, between 2002 and 2008 the world food
prices more than doubled (Angus and Butler 75). In the research conducted by the World Bank, it
was concluded that the main reason for an increase in prices was a rise of biofuels production in
United States and among nations of European Union (Angus and Butler 75). “In 2007, US vehicles
burned enough corn to cover the entire import needs of the eighty-two poorest countries” (Angus
and Butler 75). Two years later, ethanol makers in the United States produced more biofuels than
did Canada’s and Australia’s combined grain production turn out to be (Angus and Butler 75).
While developed nations are placing more value on their profit and proposing programs for
modern
farming methods, a large percentage of people in the world have never seen meat, milk,
fish, and eggs in their daily meal. Large coffee plantations in Brazil take up a vast amount of land to
grow a crop that has little nutritional value. As coffee is a profitable crop, Brazil exports it to North
America and Europe, instead of focusing on domestic issues of hunger (Sorvall 50). Thus, a lack of
necessary nutrients, such as amino acids that form proteins, results in
starvation and inadequate
energy, which leads to illnesses caused by protein deficiencies. In United States, “the steak dinner
takes six times more land to produce because the steer needs space to roam and graze. More
acreage is required to grow grain and hay to fatten the livestock” (Sorvall 48). However, developing
nations thus see help from United States, which sets its residents taxes for foreign aid programs that
39
reach up to $10 billion per year (Sorvall 48). In recent years, this has helped poor nations increase
their income by 3%, which means each person within these countries receives $1.00 per year
(Sorvall 50).
Similarly, in India more than half of the population is involved in farming, and yet religious
and traditional obstacles increase an already insufficient food intake. Religion does not allow
consumption of food, and ineffective agricultural methods further spread starvation. As a result,
“the average Indian diet totals 1,500 calories in comparison with over 3,000 for an American”
(Sorvall 50). Therefore, people in the streets are found lying down on the streets dying. Despite
that, the population of India is rising and children are born to sleep with fifteen more people in one
room (Sorvall 50). Their parents work in the fields to harvest plants before they dry in the hot sun,
as the family may otherwise die. The scarcity of food in India is not the nation’s only problem; the
shortage of water is another issue that is strongly linked to the global increase in population.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: