WASHINGTON, May 1, 2008

Bush Asks Congress To OK $770M In Food Aid

As Widespread Hunger And Social Unrest Loom, Money Urged To Alleviate Soaring Food Prices

  • President Bush delivers a statement about food distribution, Thursday, May 1, 2008, in the Diplomatic Room of the White House in Washington.

    President Bush delivers a statement about food distribution, Thursday, May 1, 2008, in the Diplomatic Room of the White House in Washington.  (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

  • Photo Essay Grain Drain

    U.N. says sharp rise in food prices has developed into a global crisis.

(CBS/AP)  President Bush urged Congress Thursday to approve $770 million to help alleviate dramatically escalating food prices that threaten widespread hunger and increasing social unrest around the world.

In a surprise mid-afternoon appearance at the White House, Mr. Bush announced he is asking lawmakers to approve the additional funds for global food aid and development programs. The money - to be directed primarily at needy African nations - is being included in a broader $70 billion Iraq war funding measure for 2009 that the White House sent to Capitol Hill on Thursday.

"In some of the world's poorest nations, rising prices can mean the difference between getting a daily meal and going without food," Mr. Bush said. "The American people are generous people and they're a compassionate people. We believe in the timeless truth `to whom much is given, much is expected."'

The new money comes on top of $200 million Mr. Bush ordered released two weeks ago for emergency food aid. It also is in addition to a pending $350 million request for emergengy food aid funds. Because the new funds are part of a 2009 budget, they wouldn't be available for distribution until the start of the fiscal year on Oct. 1, even if they are approved sooner.

Even so, Mr. Bush called it "just the beginning" of the U.S. effort to help. He said the United States would spend a total of $5 billion this year and next on food aid and related programs.

"America's in the lead, we'll stay in the lead and we expect others to participate along with us," he said.

The new funds are aimed at meeting immediate needs with direct shipments of food aid, and the White House said they would allow for millions more people to get help. Emergency aid accounts for $620 million of the request, said Steve McMillin, deputy director of the president's Office of Management and Budget.

The funds also have long-term aims, with $150 million aimed at boosting U.S. programs to help farmers in developing countries increase productivity and make cash purchases of local crops, so communities are less in need of emergency help in the first place.

The issue has become more urgent recently because of food shortages and rising prices that, combined with high gas costs and rising home foreclosures, are putting a huge squeeze on families at home and abroad.

Just in the last year, prices of America's food staples have skyrocketed, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann. The price of eggs, at $2.20 a dozen, is up 35 percent; milk, at $3.78 a gallon, is up 23 percent; and pasta, at $1.08 a pound, is up 19 percent. Fruits and vegetables are also up double-digits.

"The price of food at retail and the producer level is inflating at a rate we haven't really seen since the 70s," says food analyst Andrew Wolf.

The world price of flour has almost doubled and in Egypt, a country that has to import more than half the wheat it needs, flour has started to look like gold dust, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips from Cairo. The subsidized loaves have become scarcer and the lines to get them have become longer.

A big problem is that flour has become so valuable it's become less of a food source and more of a trading commodity, adds Phillips. It's a lot more profitable to sell it out the back door of a bakery onto the black market, than it is to bake it into bread and sell it out the front door to these people.

There have been strikes, riots and several deaths, reports Phillips. The threat of civil unrest has become real.

Quote

We believe in the timeless truth 'to whom much is given, much is expected.'

President Bush
What has been termed the first global food crisis since World War II has resulted in cries for help from United Nations officials and raised questions about how Mr. Bush will respond.

Some have blamed the food crisis in part on Bush-backed policies that push food-based biofuels such as ethanol as alternative energy sources. Bush says diverting corn and soybeans into fuel is still a smart approach, though he favors increasing funding for research into eventually using wood chips or switchgrass rather than food crops.

Mr. Bush's top economic adviser, Edward Lazear, said ethanol made from corn is responsible for just 2-3 percent of the overall increase in global food prices, which are 43 percent up this year over last year.

Mr. Bush's announcement drew praise from several quarters.

"Millions of people around the world may be saved from starvation if we can quickly move forward with the president's request," said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill. "Global aid is not only the right thing to do; it's the smart and safe thing to do. I commend the president for his leadership."

The United States is the world's largest provider of food aid, delivering more than $2.1 billion to 78 developing countries last year.




© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by jt_lancer May 4, 2008 6:04 PM EDT
Government intervention (farm and ethanol subsidies, import and export tariffs, etc.)is largely responsible for high food prices!

How will more government subsidies fix the underlying problem that the government created?
Reply to this comment
by pentangyl May 3, 2008 5:14 PM EDT
And yet we pay our farmers not to grow crops!

After administration fees, how much is actually sent to these nations!

I wonder out of that 770 Million, how much will the US receive for domestic product exports.
Or will it all be foreign grown too!
Reply to this comment
by pentangyl May 3, 2008 5:09 PM EDT
"My friends, I will have an energy policy that we will be talking about, which will eliminate our dependence on oil from the Middle East that will prevent us from having ever to send our young men and women into conflict again in the Middle East," McCain said.
Reply to this comment
by honestabe8 May 3, 2008 1:51 PM EDT
Take it out of the DEA and ONDCP budgets, Shrub
Reply to this comment
by jt_lancer May 2, 2008 6:17 PM EDT
Hmmm... Bush is calling for government food subsidies to ''solve'' a problem that government is largely responsible for?

Food prices are escalating largely due to farm subsidies, ethanol subsidies, import and export tariffs, etc.

Yet, the obtuse politicians are too blind to see this.

What exactly separates Dems and Repubs any more? Repubs claim to be opposed to subsidies, yet they cheer Bush on for his big government programs.

Like the President and the remaining presidential candidates, the economically illiterate Americans haven''t a clue how markets really work, so what difference does it make?
Reply to this comment
by aaabee-2009 May 2, 2008 6:13 PM EDT
I Love It! Bush doesn''''t help and he''''s evil, Bush tries to help and he''''s evil. You liberal simpletons need to go get a life, or at least a job.
Posted by artisan004 at 01:20 PM : May 02, 2008

Bush is helping himself. That is why help for the hungry is sandwiched inside much bigger help for his precious war. So you got the "Bush is evil" part right.
Reply to this comment
by May 2, 2008 4:20 PM EDT
I Love It! Bush doesn''t help and he''s evil, Bush tries to help and he''s evil. You liberal simpletons need to go get a life, or at least a job.
Reply to this comment
by forthepeopl1 May 2, 2008 2:44 PM EDT
AMERICANS NEEDS TO STRIKE........NO ONE WORKING FOR A WEEK OR SO WOULD TELL THE GOVERNMENT ONE THING, THEY CANT DO ANYTHING WITHOUT US AMERICANS WORKING FOR THEM AS SLAVES, SO IF EVERYONE WOULD NOT WORK FOR A COUPLE OF WEEKS, DONT BUY ANYTHING, DO NOTHING FOR A WEEK SEE HOW FAST THE GOVERNMENT STARTS LISTEN TO US.........COME ON AMERICANS WHAT WAITING FOR BUSH/CHENEY TO DECARE A STATE OF EMERGENCY BEFOR YOU WAKE-UP

AND FOR BLACKWATER, ANYONE THATS WANTS TO GET PAID TO KILL AMERICANS SHOULD BE SHOT THEMSELVES, THEY WORK FOR CHENENY AND CHENENY ONLY. WAIT UNTIL THEY USE THEM TOWARD AMERICANS WHEN THEY DECLAIR A STATE OF EMERGANCY JUST BEFORE THEY STRIKE IRAN
Reply to this comment
by jjp735i May 2, 2008 2:16 PM EDT
It''s nice to see Bush step up for once, but why is the the World Food Program sitting on $1.22 billion as reported today?

Why is Ban Ki-moon stating that the WFP had just $18 million cash on hand and asking for more money? Was he lied to or was he lying to us?

You can''t trust any one anymore it seems.

Reply to this comment
by lvdragonlady-2009 May 2, 2008 1:43 PM EDT
Just this morning there was an article that stated that the U.N has 1.22B in it''s food program but say they need more and this clown we have as president is so stupid he wants the US to give them 770M. Wakeup @$$hole, we need that money here not overseas somewhere.
Is there no way to get him out of office early??
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