Catholic Relief Services is supportive of a proposal to make changes
in the way that government food aid is delivered internationally,
provided that it has long-term provisions that will not be subject to
annual budget debates.
Recently, the Obama administration proposed shifting the model for
international food aid.
Under the current model, money is used to
purchase food produced in the U.S. and ship it overseas.
The new
proposal would rely more heavily on purchasing food locally in
impoverished and disaster-stricken nations.
“This set of reforms offers a great deal of flexibility and ways to make
food programming more efficient and to enable us to use our local
purchase mechanism to support the local farmer and the household which
needs food,” said Lisa Kuennen-Asfaw, Catholic Relief Service's public
donor group director.
“But the concern we are raising is that there's got to be an authorizing
framework in place to make sure that it's a consistent program
available year upon year....that the vehicle for this funding stays in
place,” she told CNA on April 18.
The president's recent budget proposal suggests shifting funds from the
Food for Peace Act to USAID, a government agency responsible for
administering foreign aid. This would allow greater freedom in how the
funds are utilized than at present.
A 2011 USAID report estimated that cash-based programs such as local
purchasing could save 25-50 percent in food aid costs, and do so much
more quickly.
“Buying food locally, instead of in the United States, costs much less,”
Rajiv Shah, director of USAID, said at an April 10 meeting of the
Center for Strategic and International Studies.
“That’s because the
average prices of buying and delivering American food across an ocean has increased from $390 per metric ton in 2001 to $1,180 today.”
“We agree with the goals of the president's proposal,” said
Kuennen-Asfaw. “We've been working for quite a few of these reforms over
a long period of time, and we feel that the reforms being proposed
would be very helpful as long as they are enshrined in some sort of a
legislative authorizing mechanism.”
Without an authorizing framework giving “substantial long-term support
to those programs,” she explained, the proposal would be “subject to the
whims of every single budget year.”
“Presidential initiatives come and go, and support for specific budget
lines may come and go. But the needs of the poor and vulnerable are
ongoing.”
Catholic Relief Services says the flexibility of the new proposal is of
the utmost importance.
The kind of aid that will be most helpful in any
particular situation is “very context-specific” and shouldn't be
hampered by red tape.
The Catholic agency provides food aid using both food procured in the U.S. and local purchase programs.
Currently, much of U.S. government food aid is done by purchasing food
from American producers and paying to have it shipped internationally.
That system is perceived to be grossly inefficient in many sectors.
“Where there is the appropriate food available in the local market, it
supports local agriculture and processing,” explained Kuennen-Asfaw.
“The whole value chain for local development can be supported by
providing cash instead of bringing food in.”
But when there isn't sufficient food available, as in an acute crisis
situation, it can be better to avoid large-scale local purchasing lest
aid agencies push food prices “above the reach of those who previously
were able to afford it,” she remarked.
Typically, though, “we would be able to incorporate fresh fruit and
vegetables and perhaps some animal proteins with a local purchase
program, whereas it’s hard to do that kind of thing when we have
something procured in the U.S. and shipped around the world,” said
Kuennen-Asfaw.
“We would be able to utilize foods appropriate for local tastes and
consumption habits, so when we build our nutrition messages around the
program, we're talking about things people use on a daily basis instead
of something foreign. So it's those kinds of considerations that have
encouraged us … to procure food locally, where it's appropriate and
feasible for us to do so.”
Catholic Relief Services makes a point of doing market analysis before
and during food aid interventions, to protect against doing harm to
local agricultural economies.
When doing food purchasing programs, the organization can provide
vouchers to needy families so that they can purchase food from vendors
whose food safety and quality has been verified.
Obama's proposal is supported by the head of USAID, but it has met with
resistance on Capitol Hill. Both the shipping and domestic agricultural
industries benefit from the Food for Peace Act.
To allay the fears of those groups, the proposal ensures that at least
55 percent of funding for emergency food assistance will continue to be
used for providing goods produced in the U.S.