LavichÈ:海地对全球粮食危机的脆弱性

J. Mazzeo
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引用次数: 11

摘要

2008年4月,全球食品价格上涨在海地达到了一个临界点,一连串的食品骚乱席卷了整个国家。大多数海地人依靠市场获取食物,尤其是进口大米。粮食对市场的依赖和价格的上涨导致家庭减少购买,导致饥饿现象日益严重,特别是在农村贫困人口中。海地对粮食危机的脆弱性不是供应问题;这是因为高昂的生活成本,海地克里奥尔语是奢侈的。这篇文章提出了一个问题,为什么海地这个以农民农业生产为基础的国家,容易受到全球粮食价格上涨的影响。我认为,解决当前危机的答案来自对农村生计、获取粮食的战略和全球粮食政策的理解。农户不是自给生产者。具有讽刺意味的是,由于它们对市场的依赖,它们在价格上涨中遭受的损失最大。依赖进口而非国内主食的消费模式的改变,增加了对价格上涨的脆弱性。此外,围绕粮食进口和销售的经济政策进一步增加了海地对进口的依赖。了解导致海地目前粮食危机的趋势将有助于为旨在提供临时粮食援助的政策和计划提供信息,并有望导致更有效的发展计划。这篇文章是基于2008年夏天在海地农村进行的研究,其中一部分是为世界宣明会准备通过食品援助计划来缓解危机。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
LAVICHÈ: HAITI'S VULNERABILITY TO THE GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS
In April 2008, the global rise in food prices reached a breaking point in Haiti where a series of food riots swept across the country. The majority of Haitians depend on the marketplace for food, especially imported rice. The dependence on the marketplace for food and the rise in prices has caused households to reduce purchases leading to growing hunger especially among the rural poor. Haiti's vulnerability to the food crisis is not a problem of supply; it's because of the high cost of living, laviche in Haitian Creole. This article poses the question, why is Haiti, a country rooted in peasant agricultural production, vulnerable to the rise in global food prices. I propose that answers to the current crisis come from an understanding of rural livelihoods, strategies for accessing food, and global food policies. Rural households are not subsistence producers. Ironically, they have suffered most from the rise in prices because of their dependence on the marketplace. Changing consumption patterns relying on imported rather than domestic staples have increased vulnerability to rising prices. Additionally, economic policies surrounding the import and marketing of food have further increased Haiti's dependence on imports. Understanding the trends leading to Haiti's current food crisis will help to inform policies and programs aimed at providing temporary food assistance and hopefully lead to more effective development programs. This article is based on research conducted in rural Haiti during the summer of 2008, part of which was for World Vision International as it prepared to mitigate the crisis through food assistance programs.
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