OAKLAND, CA (April 10) – As the spring meetings of the World Bank get underway in Washington, DC, 180 organizations, including NGOs, unions, and farmer and consumer groups from over 80 countries, demand that the World Bank end its Doing Business rankings and
its support of the rampant theft of land and resources from some of the
world’s poorest people -- farmers, pastoralists, and indigenous
communities, many of whom are essential food producers for the entire
planet.
“The
World Bank is facilitating land grabs and sowing poverty by putting the
interests of foreign investors before those of locals,” said Anuradha
Mittal, Executive Director of the Oakland Institute.
“Smallholder farmers are the first investors and employers in the
agricultural sector in developing countries. Instead of supporting them,
the World Bank encourages the looting of their resources for the
benefit of foreign companies and local businessmen,” said Alnoor Ladha,
Executive Director of /The Rules.
The Bank’s “Doing Business” rankings,
which score countries according to how Washington officials perceive
the “ease of doing business” there, have caused many developing-country
leaders to deregulate their economies in hopes of attracting foreign
investment. But what the Bank considers beneficial for foreign business
is very often the exact opposite for the local communities.
“The Doing Business ranking and the new Benchmarking the Business of
Agriculture that the Bank is currently developing is pushing governments
to give away their country to private interests. They should instead
support family farms and secure their durable access to land, which is
the key to the economic, social and environmental future of our
countries,” said Ibrahim Coulibaly, President of the Coordination
Nationale des Organisations Paysannes du Mali (CNOP) and Vice President
of the network of Peasant organizations and Producers in West Africa
(ROPPA).
In the agricultural sector, the rankings encourage governments to
commoditize their land -- and to sell or lease it to foreign investors,
regardless of environmental or social impact. Smallholder farmers,
pastoralists, and the indigenous peoples are casualties of this
approach, as governments and foreign corporations work hand-in-hand to
dispossess them of their land -- and gain World Bank’s approval in the
process.
The results have been devastating. Thanks to reforms and policies guided by the Bank, 20 percent of the arable land in Sierra Leone taken from rural populations has been leased to foreign sugar cane and palm oil producers. In Liberia,
British, Malaysian, and Indonesian palm-oil giants have secured
long-term leases for over 1.5 million acres of land formerly held by
local communities. In the Philippines, world’s third most popular
destination for foreign investment in land, 5.2 million hectares have
been acquired by corporations since 2006.
"Doing Business ranking is a sword of Damocles over the heads of our
leaders who wait for their next score in the ranking to gain legitimacy
before the international financial institutions, those who prescribe
development schemes for our countries, instead of the citizens. We want
our autonomy to decide the future of our land, agricultural and food
policies,“ said Amadou Kanoute, Director of CICODEV Africa.
The land-grab problem is about to get worse. Under pressure from the
G8 and with funding from the Gates Foundation, the Bank is doubling down
on its fetish for rankings by introducing a new program called
“Benchmarking the Business of Agriculture” (BBA). The BBA’s explicit
goal is to promote “the emergence of a stronger commercial agriculture
sector.”
“The BBA will limit governments' capacity to pursue their own food
policy objectives, further enable the corporate takeover of land and
other resources and reduce labor protection for agricultural workers who
already suffer from serious decent work deficits, ” said Ron Oswald,
general secretary of the global food and agricultural workers union,
IUF.
“We’re standing up with farmers, herders, and indigenous peoples of the developing world
who are being steamrolled by the World Bank’s pro-corporate agenda,”
added Anuradha Mittal. “Initiatives like the World Bank’s ‘Doing
Business’ rankings encourage governments to steal from the poor in order
to give to the rich. That must end.”
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