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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


‘Perfect storm’ looms for world’s food supplies, says Oxfam

Posted: 04 Jun 2011 02:18 AM PDT

'The food system is buckling under intense pressure,' according to a new Oxfam report. — Picture courtesy of Peter Baxter

PARIS, June 4 — Oxfam has called for an overhaul of the world's food system, warning that in a couple of decades, millions more people would be gripped by hunger due to population growth and climate-hit harvests.

A "broken food system" means that the price of some staples will more than double by 2030, battering the world's poorest people, who spend up to 80 per cent of their income on food, the British-based aid group predicted.

"The food system is buckling under intense pressure from climate change, ecological degradation, population growth, rising energy prices, rising demand for meat and dairy products and competition for land from biofuels, industry, and urbanisation," Oxfam said in a report.

It added: "The international community is sleepwalking into an unprecedented and avoidable human development reversal."

Noting that some 900 million people experience hunger today, Oxfam said the tally of misery could rise still further when a "perfect storm" struck a few decades from now.

By 2050, the world's population was expected to rise by a third, from 6.9 billion today to 9.1 billion. Demand for food would rise even higher, by 70 per cent, as more prosperous economies demanded more calories.

But by this time, climate change will have started to bite, with drought, flood and storms affecting crop yields that, after the "green revolution" of the 1960s, had already begun to flatline in the early 1990s.

The price of staple foods such as corn, also known as maize, which has already hit record peaks, will more than double in the next 20 years, it predicted.

"In this new age of crisis, as climate impacts become increasingly severe and fertile land and fresh water supplies become increasingly scarce, feeding the world will get harder still," Oxfam chief Jeremy Hobbs said.

The report, Growing a Better Future, trails a campaign for reform that Oxfam is launching in 45 countries, supported by former Brazilian President Lula Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, South African Nobel laureate Desmond Tutu and actress Scarlett Johansson.

Solutions envisaged by Oxfam focus on cutting out waste, especially of water, and curbing agriculture and biofuel subsidies in rich countries.

The report also calls for prising open closed markets and ending the domination of commodities and seeds trade by a handful of large corporations.

Small farms — traditionally dismissed as a hindrance to food productivity — could in fact drive the renaissance in yield with the help of investment, infrastructure and market access, it argued.

Just as important, said the report, is to set up new global governance to tackle food crises, including the creation of a multilateral food bank.

"During the 2008 food price crisis, cooperation was nowhere to be seen," lamented the report, saying the disarray ignited a "grab" for agricultural land in Africa by parched countries in the Gulf and elsewhere.

"Governments were unable to agree on the causes of the price rises, let alone how to respond. Food reserves had been allowed to collapse to historic lows," it said.

"Existing international institutions and forums were rendered impotent as more than 30 countries imposed export bans in a negative-sum game of beggar-thy-neighbour policy making." — AFP-Relaxnews

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Australia wrestles ‘one-armed-bandits’ addiction

Posted: 04 Jun 2011 01:43 AM PDT

SYDNEY, June 4 — She's smart, capable and a loving mother to three young children but Rebecca is battling an often hidden feature of Australian society that has taken her to the brink of suicide — a gambling addiction.

"I have a hideous gambling problem," the 36-year-old admits.

"For someone who can have a family and be very articulate and can be sensible in so many ways ... just to have something that I have no control over — people don't see it.

"With alcohol or drugs you see it. With a gambler it's hidden."

Australians like a bet — on the horses, football games, at casinos, even on the outcome of coin tosses in the national game of "two up".

But the most popular form of betting is on electronic poker machines or "pokies", with the devices installed in pubs and clubs taking more than half of the A$19 billion (RM60 billion) the nation spent on gambling in 2008-09.

The country has some 200,000 pokie machines, one of the highest concentrations per capita in the world, and the "one-armed bandits" are hugely popular, contributing some A$5 billion in tax revenues each year.

A punter gambling at a one-armed bandit. — AFP pic

According to the Productivity Commission, 600,000 Australians — four per cent of the adult population — gamble on the pokies at least once a week, many enjoying the social setting and escapism it can provide.

But it found some 15 per cent of regular players were problem gamblers, accounting for about 40 per cent of total spending on the machines which spin so quickly they can take thousands of dollars from a luckless punter each hour.

The link between pokies and the social costs of problem gambling are now under the spotlight in Canberra, with the government poised to introduce limits on betting on the machines, outraging the pub and club industry.

Key independent MP Andrew Wilkie, whose support for Labor Prime Minister Julia Gillard's fragile coalition government is vital to its survival, is insisting on reforms to limit the amount people can bet.

Gillard has backed Wilkie's push for a pre-commitment system for all machines that allow a single bet of more than A$1, under which gamblers would be unable to bet beyond a nominated limit.

But the decision has prompted outrage from the clubs industry, which has unleashed a furious A$20 million publicity campaign under the war cry "It's un-Australian".

"The heritage we are looking to defend is the right of Australians' being able to gamble with their money without being treated like they are doing something shameful or wrong," Clubs New South Wales spokesman Jeremy Bath said.

Bath said the reforms, and the costs of implementing them, would undermine the future of the industry without helping problem gamblers who would be pushed to online betting, which he said studies showed was more addictive.

"This technology, through its punishment of the recreational gambler, will decimate club revenue by at least 40 per cent. This is a figure no business, let alone one that is not for profit, could ever hope to survive," he said.

Bath points out that clubs with pokies are not-for-profit businesses which channel part of their revenue back into the community by funding sporting and recreational facilities among other things.

Critics also say the pre-commitment idea is a "nanny state" measure that could allow the government to keep a tab on gamblers through the mandatory card system, resulting in a loss of freedom and privacy.

Wilkie's supporters, however, argue that clubs reliant on problem gamblers do not deserve to be in business, and the loss of privacy argument is hypocrisy given that clubs closely monitor their clients through their loyalty schemes.

The idea of a pre-commitment card has been welcomed by some in the counselling field as a step forward even if it fails to solve the problem.

"It may prevent people to slip towards a full-blown addiction in the first place, but for problem gamblers the way out is motivation and therapy," said Christopher Hunt, who works at a Sydney University treatment clinic.

Baptist minister Tim Costello, a long-time campaigner against the pokies, said he has done too many funerals for people who committed suicide after losing their marriages, jobs and homes to gambling.

"The fruit machines in Britain, you can lose A$30-40 an hour, it's a £50 (RM250) payout per maximum," he said.

"(In Australia) you can lose four or five grand an hour, maximum is A$15,000 actually, from pokies and the average losses per hour are something around A$2,000. Who spends A$2,000 on an hour's entertainment?"

Clubs NSW disputes the A$15,000 figure, saying the most a person could lose in an hour in New South Wales was estimated by the Productivity Commission at A$1,200 and this was if they were betting the maximum of A$10 each time.

Rebecca, not her real name, has lost count of the number of times she has pawned jewellery, or been unable to pay bills or fund a night out because of her addiction to the pokies.

Over the years her relationships, work, finances and health have suffered, to the point where she found herself in hospital two months ago after trying to kill herself.

She is dealing with her problem through Gamblers Anonymous but says she knows, from her experiences in Sydney's pubs and clubs, that there are a lot of other addicts who are not receiving help.

"You see it. You see the fury of the money going in and (people) not pulling at a win but continuing to play or pulling out and going to another machine and losing it all," she said.

"It's quite scary the amount of people that are out there in pubs that if you were to look at their faces, they look absolutely miserable. And they don't seek help." — AFP-Relaxnews

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