South Korea: Ground Zero for Food Sovereignty and Community Resilience
South Korea: Ground Zero for Food Sovereignty and Community Resilience
Saturday, 09 November 2013 01:26
By Christine Ahn, Foreign Policy in Focus | Report
The bustling, fast-paced, wired metropolis city of Seoul is what most people know of South Korea. Now the 15th largest economy in the world, South Koreas economy is driven by the exports sector controlled by corporations like Samsung, Hyundai, LG, and Daewoo. Thesechaebols have significant global market share: 37 percent in LCD TVs, 33 percent in hand-held phones, and 9 percent in automobiles. The term chaebol nation aptly describes South Koreas economy: the top 30 chaebols account for 82 percent of the countrys exports.
Its hard to imagine that just two generations ago, farming fueled the nations economy. In the 1970s, farmers accounted for half the population; today, they represent only 6.2 percent. South Koreas rapid transformation from an agrarian economy to a highly industrialized one wasnt accidental; it was the outcome of the central governments development and trade liberalization policies that in the early 1980s began to see farming as part of Koreas past, not its future.
The major blow to Korean agriculture fell in 1994, when South Korea joined the WTO and the Agreement on Agriculture, which effectively forced the government to eliminate quotas and tariffs even while major agriculture exporting blocs like the United States and European Union still gave billions in subsidies to their own farmers. The result of all this liberalization: South Korea is only 20-percent self-sufficient in grain production, compared with the 1970s when it was at 70 percent.
If South Korean chaebols and the politicians that represent them had their way, small farmersthe majority of South Koreas agricultural sectorwould all but disappear under the logic that they are uncompetitive in the global marketplace. They argue that it would be far more efficient for the country to continue to import cheap food from less developed countriesincluding through the process of acquiring land outside of Korea, like in Africa and South East Asia. ................(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/19928-south-korea-ground-zero-for-food-sovereignty-and-community-resilience