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Sep-25-2011 15:30printcomments

ActionAid Urges G20 Ministers to Take Immediate Steps to Avert Food and Finance Crises

ActionAid is also calling on ministers to address tax policy and domestic resource mobilization so that poor countries can better weather the crisis.

Woman and kids in Africa
Courtesy: Actionaid International

(WASHINGTON D.C.) - As Greece edges closer to default, confidence in the Euro and the dollar declines and global food prices soar, ActionAid called on G20 finance and development ministers meeting today to put serious reforms in motion.

Although global food security is among the top agenda items for today’s meeting, there are serious concerns that despite continued hikes in the price of staple foods, ministers will not take steps to prevent the trend from becoming another global food crisis.

“Ministers must approve the pilot program for emergency food reserves in West Africa,” says Marie Brill, Senior Policy Analyst for ActionAid USA. “These food reserves could be the difference between life and death for millions of the world’s most vulnerable people. At the same time, the whole range of steps to reduce food price volatility, including buffer stock deployment, must be further explored.”

ActionAid notes that the G20 has thus far been supportive of the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program (GAFSP), which channels support to the smallholders and women farmers who supply most of the food in Africa and other regions. But Neil Watkins, Director of Policy and Campaigns for ActionAid USA adds, “Warm words aren't enough - with food prices on the rise and hunger rising unabated we are calling on additional donors to fill the remaining needs by pledging support for the GAFSP’s public sector window now.”

Eroding confidence in both the dollar and the euro mean that the danger of financial crisis will not fade until serious reform of the international monetary system are underway. Soren Ambrose, ActionAid’s International Policy Manager, says “A well-functioning global economy should use a neutral global reserve currency to eliminate distortions. Initiating an orderly global process now would avert a rushed and chaotic one later. ”

ActionAid is also calling on ministers to address tax policy and domestic resource mobilization so that poor countries can better weather the crisis. “The G20 needs to take decisive action to put a stop to the financial abuses made possible by shadow banking systems and tax havens,” says Watkins. “The G20 needs to stop letting corporations off the hook from paying taxes in countries they are operating in.”

Source: ActionAid, an international anti-poverty agency working in 50 countries, taking sides with poor people to end poverty and injustice together. Together with more than 2,000 civil society partners worldwide, ActionAid works with and supports the poorest and most vulnerable people to fight for and gain their rights to food, shelter, work, basic healthcare and a voice in the decisions that affect their lives. View the website at www.actionaidusa.org.

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Submitted by: Jennifer Fierberg, MSW; a correspondent, Assistant Editor, and Volunteer Coordinator for NGO News Africa through the volunteer project of the UN. Jennifer is also the media co-coordinator and senior funding executive for The Africa Global Village (www.africaglobalvillage.com)




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Dexter September 25, 2011 9:23 pm (Pacific time)

I hate to say this, BUT Africa has their resources and means to build there own countries up. Africa has a huge amount of wealth. But sadly the people they are elected to power, by copious amounts of vote rigging, intimidation, and corruption does not help this whole situation. Hardly anything is invested back in to these countries, instead that investment normally goes straight in to those governments Swiss bank accounts. Even Red Cross has complained about the missing food that undoubtedly get's side tracked to more favored areas, and people that are on the right side of the political fence. It's no good keep throwing money at food at them, knowing full well about 70 percent of that is going missing. The best way to avoid this is to put those governments in a position where they are forced in to re-investing in to there own countries. Only then once they have proved themselves, that they can be offered an outside investment related incentive, to help build that country up even more.

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