2.A - human causes of inequality in global food security Flashcards

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1
Q

land ownership

A

farmers may be owner-occupiers, tenants or landless employees on state owned farms
farmers may have private ownership

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2
Q

Russia - private ownership

A

2001 - Putin addressed land ownership issues
state owned farms = low production bc wages were fixed despite output
demand for private ownership low
areas of private ownership: Sarator and Tatarstan = productive farming
achieved 26,000 private farms, rest state owned

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3
Q

china - introduction of quotas

A

pre 1949
intensive farms ran by tenant farmers owned by landlords
1/2 produce to landlord

post 1949: output low = collectivisation ran by state communes

1982: commune system abolished = contracts formed
contracts = land rent-free, quotas set and surplus grain sold by farmers & excess land sub-let allowed

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4
Q

Bangladesh - Share Cropping

A

share-cropping
farmers pay ‘rent in kind’ to landowner to occupy land
landlord supplies necessities: fertiliser, seeds, machinery for 50% harvest
= farmers poor and food insecure

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5
Q

capital

A

a countries assets

EX - money/ liquid assets, equipments, inventory etc

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6
Q

Capital - ACs

A

capital intensive = profitable

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7
Q

capital - LIDCs

A

labour intensive = non profitable

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8
Q

areas of competition for farmers to achieve food security

A

in food markets
in resources
technology

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9
Q

competition in food markets

A
  • food supply controlled by few TNCs = competition low
  • produce at low cost = concern of low wages for farmers to produce
  • prices of food increase = concern for poorest groups bc high% of income spent on food
  • Govs favouring companies in ACs > LIDCs = keeping the poor poor
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10
Q

competition in resources

A

food producers high competition for land, water and energy resources
land: agricultural land lost to urbanisation (roads, housing etc)
water: used for drinking and cleaning > farming
energy resources: huge amounts needed for farming & gov growing biofuels on good quality land = misplacement of energy

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11
Q

competition for technology

A

ACs can afford technology > LIDCS cannot
developments available to ACs > LIDCS
fertilisers, seeds, mechanisation, land management of irrigation all improving production

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12
Q

land grabbing

A

acquisition of farmland in LIDCs by ACs to ensure their own food security

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12
Q

who is involved in land grabbing

A

countries with land and water constraints but rich in capital - eg - Gulf States

countries with large populations and food security concerns - eg - India and china

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13
Q

why land grabbing is needed

A

push factors requiring other methods of sourcing food

push factors:

  • water scarcity
  • export restrictions
  • price inflations in global markets
  • lack of productive land and water
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14
Q

problems for host countries

A

the poor risk access to land and food supplies - land not used to source food for locals

local farmers displaced & no prospects for alternative employment

unemployment

unequal relations between foreign national govs and local farmers with food insecurity

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15
Q

benefits to host countries

A

creation of local employment

development of rural infrastructure

resources increase

introduction of new agricultural technology

local food surplus = increase in food security