[governance] Clinton Admits: "Free" Trade is Harmful to 3rd World

Imran Ahmed Shah ias_pk at yahoo.com
Mon Apr 5 09:34:11 EDT 2010


Dear Roland Perrym yes you are right that this given url is seperate to the context of this statement.
I wan to quote other reference regarding dumping millions of tons of surplus wheat into the ocean.
Thanks to point out.
Imran

________________________________
From: Roland Perry <roland at internetpolicyagency.com>
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org
Sent: Mon, 5 April, 2010 13:48:42
Subject: Re: [governance] Clinton Admits: "Free" Trade is Harmful to 3rd World

In message <179770.88840.qm at web33005.mail.mud.yahoo.com>, at 00:41:23 on Mon, 5 Apr 2010, Imran Ahmed Shah <ias_pk at yahoo.com> writes
> 1.      Do you know how much food, grains, wheat and rice are through away just to maintain the Consumer Prices,  

This probably refers to (eg) various EU <foodstuff> mountains, which are a serious intergovernmental issue.

> instead of helping poor people of the world, “What a waste: Britain throws away £10bn of food every year url ref. http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/news/what-a-waste
> -britain-throws-away-16310bn-of-food-every-year-822809.html”.

But this is something entirely different. It refers to un-used food which is thrown into the garbage bin by individual UK households, at the rate of about £1 a day per household.

It's mainly (only 15% was still "in-date") perishable food which is no longer fit for consumption - and bad planning in the household has meant it wasn't used before growing a coating of mold, or being inadvertently kept on the shelf until after the published expiry date.

90% of the food they buy doesn't suffer this fate, and perhaps a better way to leave more food for the rest of the world is to cut overall consumption by 10%, especially those items air-freighted with vast carbon footprints from the four corners of the globe.

So here's a practical question: Looking in my own refrigerator just now, I have noticed most of a pack of chillies (cost £0.50) from Morocco, expiry date 22Mar and they have indeed grown some interesting looking mold. But I can't eat chillies quickly enough. So what should I do - not buy them again (smaller packets not available in that shop), and who should public policy seek to protect - Moroccan farmers, or Moroccan consumers - in the event that the UK market for chillies reduces, taking with it the wholesale price.
-- Roland Perry
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