By

Michael T. Klare /

TomDispatch/ August 8, 2012, 3:24 PM

The hunger wars in our future

The sun rises over grain bins and a drought-struggling corn crop Aug. 4, 2012, in Ashland, Ill.

The sun rises over grain bins and a drought-struggling corn crop Aug. 4, 2012, in Ashland, Ill. / AP Photo

(TomDispatch) The Great Drought of 2012 has yet to come to an end, but we already know that its consequences will be severe. With more than one-half of America's counties designated as drought disaster areas, the 2012 harvest of corn, soybeans, and other food staples is guaranteed to fall far short of predictions. This, in turn, will boost food prices domestically and abroad, causing increased misery for farmers and low-income Americans and far greater hardship for poor people in countries that rely on imported U.S. grains.

This, however, is just the beginning of the likely consequences: if history is any guide, rising food prices of this sort will also lead to widespread social unrest and violent conflict.

Food -- affordable food -- is essential to human survival and well-being. Take that away, and people become anxious, desperate, and angry. In the United States, food represents only about 13% of the average household budget, a relatively small share, so a boost in food prices in 2013 will probably not prove overly taxing for most middle- and upper-income families. It could, however, produce considerable hardship for poor and unemployed Americans with limited resources. "You are talking about a real bite out of family budgets," commented Ernie Gross, an agricultural economist at Omaha's Creighton University. This could add to the discontent already evident in depressed and high-unemployment areas, perhaps prompting an intensified backlash against incumbent politicians and other forms of dissent and unrest.

It is in the international arena, however, that the Great Drought is likely to have its most devastating effects. Because so many nations depend on grain imports from the U.S. to supplement their own harvests, and because intense drought and floods are damaging crops elsewhere as well, food supplies are expected to shrink and prices to rise across the planet. "What happens to the U.S. supply has immense impact around the world," says Robert Thompson, a food expert at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. As the crops most affected by the drought, corn and soybeans, disappear from world markets, he noted, the price of all grains, including wheat, is likely to soar, causing immense hardship to those who already have trouble affording enough food to feed their families.

The Hunger Games, 2007-2011

What happens next is, of course, impossible to predict, but if the recent past is any guide, it could turn ugly. In 2007-2008, when rice, corn, and wheat experienced prices hikes of 100% or more, sharply higher prices -- especially for bread -- sparked "food riots" in more than two dozen countries, including Bangladesh, Cameroon, Egypt, Haiti, Indonesia, Senegal, and Yemen. In Haiti, the rioting became so violent and public confidence in the government's ability to address the problem dropped so precipitously that the Haitian Senate voted to oust the country's prime minister, Jacques-Edouard Alexis. In other countries, angry protestors clashed with army and police forces, leaving scores dead.

Those price increases of 2007-2008 were largely attributed to the soaring cost of oil, which made food production more expensive. (Oil's use is widespread in farming operations, irrigation, food delivery, and pesticide manufacture.) At the same time, increasing amounts of cropland worldwide were being diverted from food crops to the cultivation of plants used in making biofuels.

The next price spike in 2010-11 was, however, closely associated with climate change. An intense drought gripped much of eastern Russia during the summer of 2010, reducing the wheat harvest in that breadbasket region by one-fifth and prompting Moscow to ban all wheat exports. Drought also hurt China's grain harvest, while intense flooding destroyed much of Australia's wheat crop. Together with other extreme-weather-related effects, these disasters sent wheat prices soaring by more than 50% and the price of most food staples by 32%.

Once again, a surge in food prices resulted in widespread social unrest, this time concentrated in North Africa and the Middle East. The earliest protests arose over the cost of staples in Algeria and then Tunisia, where -- no coincidence -- the precipitating event was a young food vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi, setting himself on fire to protest government harassment. Anger over rising food and fuel prices combined with long-simmering resentments about government repression and corruption sparked what became known as the Arab Spring. The rising cost of basic staples, especially a loaf of bread, was also a cause of unrest in Egypt, Jordan, and Sudan. Other factors, notably anger at entrenched autocratic regimes, may have proved more powerful in those places, but as the author of "Tropic of Chaos," Christian Parenti, wrote, "The initial trouble was traceable, at least in part, to the price of that loaf of bread."

Michael Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, a TomDispatch regular, and the author, most recently, of "The Race for What's Left" (Metropolitan Books). A documentary movie based on his book "Blood and Oil" can be previewed and ordered at www.bloodandoilmovie.com. You can follow Klare on Facebook by clicking here. This piece originally appeared on TomDispatch. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

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28 Comments Add a Comment
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angmoran10 says:
Overpopulation, fewer families growing gardens at home, extreme reliance on grocery stores and prepackaged food... not to mention droughts that have occured throughout recorded time. 'The Dust Bowl has been identified as the "most extreme natural event in 350 years".' 2.5 million people migrated at once- and this severely curtailed economic recovery from the Great Depression.

Who cares what HOAs and snobby neighbors think about your fenced in back yard? Grow what you need. Hunt more and rely upon grocery stores less. Why is it always someone else's fault when we are all responsible for sustaining ourselves?
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sepa2 says:
with speculators rather than productive entities and consumers of the food industry are in control what do you expect?
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Resin-Smoker says:
Food isnt the issue here, water is...Either there is too much or too little.

The future of food will be determined by those that "own" the water rights not by the farmers or nations they're from.
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TimeToEvolve says:
Besides the pending disaster of man made global climate change, the author forgot to mention the nightmare of the American Republicons. They are fearful of everything so they must wage war all over the world, thus destabilizing everything. The want chaos so they can steal.
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MaxK341 says:
The drought is mostly affecting the corn and soybean crops which are 90% genetically modified. Who needs frankenfood? I won't miss them.
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MegaProcrastination says:
""" In the United States, food represents only about 13% of the average household budget, a relatively small share, so a boost in food prices in 2013 will probably not prove overly taxing for most middle- and upper-income families."""

Wow! Only 13%? At least 25% of our budget goes straight into groceries.
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EmpireGeorge______-- replies:
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maybe you are mega procrastinating and not buying things on sale, but at the last moment when you really need them, it's about planning....25% of a budget is a lot for groceries alone, but it also depends onthe size of your family.
CaptainSmollett replies:
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Clearly, the percentage is inverse to income.
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lesserof2evil says:
It's ok, global warming will melt the Artic, making it much easier to drill for oil to run the air conditioners. And by the way, God will save us if we pray a lot more.
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lesserof2evil replies:
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Pray to you God now. He will save you, so keep on drilling baby.
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omnibus66 says:
The Tea Potty is not worried about food shortages. After all, they buy their food at the grocery store.
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lnytnz says:
overpopulation
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CaptainSmollett replies:
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over-immigration
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prohb says:
The deniers to climate change are like the insane Roman emperor, Nero - fiddling away while the world burns.
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1stlttightwad replies:
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Tell you whut..Let us the good ole USA shoot ourself in the foot on this global warming mess..It's been going on for 100's of thousands of years, long before man even learned how to make fire. Let's be the bankrupt,destitute,hero's of the world while China opens a coal mine A WEEK, and India both could give a kerapp about CO2 in the air...You be the hero..I can kill something to eat and not worry about trucks with no fuel making deliveries..I can also build a fire to cook my meal..You can't and are so totally screwe* Now you know why we keep guns..it's to keep you numbskull from trying to steal our food...Starve baby, starve.
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