The 3% Plan to End Starvation
By World Beyond War
October 30, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- "World
Beyond War" -
Here’s a proposal that could end starvation
around the globe. Never again need a
human being lack the food to live. Never again
need a single child or adult suffer the horrors
of starvation. Hunger as a danger to anyone can
be made a thing of the past. All that is
required, apart from basic skills in
distributing resources, is 3 percent of the
military budget of the United States, or 1.5
percent of all the military budgets in the
world.
In recent years, the U.S. military budget has
been increased dramatically. This plan would
scale it back to 97 percent of its current
level, a difference far smaller than the amount
that goes
unaccounted for each
year. U.S. military spending would remain
over twice that of the most common enemies
designated by the U.S. government — China,
Russia, and Iran — combined.
But the change to the world would be
tremendous if starvation were eliminated. The
gratitude felt toward those who had done it
would be powerful. Imagine what the world would
think of the United States, if it were known as
the country that ended world starvation. Imagine
more friends worldwide, more respect and
admiration, fewer enemies. The benefits to
communities assisted would be transformational.
The human lives rescued from misery and
incapacitation would constitute an enormous gift
to the world.
Here’s how 3 percent of U.S. military
spending could do it. In 2008, the United
Nations
said that $30 billion per year could end
hunger on earth, as reported in the
New York Times,
Los Angeles Times, and many other
outlets. The Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations (UN FAO) tells us that
number is still up to date.
As of 2019, the annual Pentagon base budget,
plus war budget, plus nuclear weapons in the
Department of Energy, plus military spending by
the Department of Homeland Security, plus
interest on deficit military spending, and other
military spending totaled well over $1 trillion,
in fact
$1.25 trillion. Three percent of a trillion
is 30 billion.
Global military spending is
$1.8 trillion, as calculated by the
Stockholm International Peace Research
Institute, which only includes $649 billion of
U.S. military spending as of 2018, making the
actual global total well over $2 trillion.
One-and-a-half percent of 2 trillion is 30
billion. Every nation on earth that has a
military can be asked to move its share to
alleviate hunger.
The Math
3% x $1 trillion = $30 billion
1.5% x $2 trillion = $30 billion
What We Propose
Our proposal is that the U.S. Congress and a
future U.S. administration, dedicated to the
goal of eradicating hunger, begin by ending
sanctions on other nations which increase
starvation, and by enacting an annual reduction
in military spending of at least $30 billion. A
number of think tanks have
proposed various
ways in which military
spending could be
reduced by that amount or more. These
savings should be specifically diverted to
programs designed to reduce hunger worldwide,
and the direct tradeoffs between military cuts
and hunger eradication should be presented
explicitly to U.S. taxpayers and to the world.
How these funds would be spent requires
detailed analysis, and would likely change each
year as specific food needs arise. First, the
United States could increase its international
assistance, both for immediate humanitarian
relief and longer term agricultural development,
to a per capita level comparable to other major
donors, such as the UK, Germany, and a number of
Scandinavian
countries. In the immediate term, the United
States should increase its contributions to the
UN World Food Program’s appeals for funds needed
to respond to humanitarian crises worldwide
(many of which are due to conflicts that are
fueled by U.S. weapons sales and/or by the
actions of the U.S. military).
Part of this funding also should be dedicated
to longer term, sustainable improvement of
agriculture and food market systems in
vulnerable countries, through the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations,
as well as various research institutes and
foundations specializing in these areas.
Although the World Bank and other international
financial institutions have a mixed record in
terms of benefiting the neediest, consideration
should be given to increasing U.S. contributions
specifically tied to assisting the agriculture
ministries of certain select countries, as a
means of improving long term food security in
these countries.
The only strings attached to these
donations would be that the use of the funds
needs to be completely transparent, with every
expenditure publicly recorded, and that the
funds be distributed purely on the basis of
need, influenced in no way by politically driven
agendas.
The steps outlined above could be undertaken
with minimal new legislative authorities or
reorganization of the U.S. Government. A future
U.S. administration could put forward to
Congress budget requests, and regardless
Congress could enact budgets, that dramatically
increase assistance programs administered by the
State Department (not including those related to
military assistance). This should also involve a
change in assistance priorities, to focus on the
neediest countries and turn away from
politically motivated programs. Initiatives
already in existence, such as the Feed the
Future program, created during the Obama
Administration but still continuing today,
should be provided with increased funding. What
is required is sufficient will to act.
FAQ
Doesn’t the UN FAO say that $265
billion is needed to end hunger, not $30
billion?
No, it does not. In a
2015 report, the UN FAO estimated that $265
billion per year for 15 years would be necessary
to permanently eliminate extreme poverty — a
much broader project than just preventing
starvation one year at a time. The FAO’s
spokesperson explained in an email to World
BEYOND War: “It would be incorrect to compare
the two figures [$30 billion a year to end
hunger vs. $265 billion over 15 years] as the
265 billion has been calculated taking into
consideration a number of initiatives including
social protection cash transfers aimed at
extracting people from extreme poverty and not
just hunger.”
The U.S. government already spends $42
billion per year on aid. Why should it spend
another $30 billion?
As a
percentage of gross national income or
per capita, the U.S. gives much less aid
than other countries do. Plus,
40 percent of current U.S. “aid” is not
actually aid in any ordinary sense; it’s deadly
weapons (or money with which to buy deadly
weapons from U.S. companies). In addition, U.S.
aid is not targeted based purely on need but
based largely on military interests. The
biggest recipients are Afghanistan, Israel,
Egypt, and Iraq, places the United States deems
most in need of weapons, not places an
independent institution deems most in need of
food or other aid.
Individuals in the U.S. already give
private charitable donations at high rates. Why
do we need the U.S. government to provide aid?
Because children are starving to death in a
world awash in wealth. There is no evidence that
private charity decreases when public charity
increases, but there is lots of evidence that
private charity is not all it’s cracked up to
be. Most U.S. charity goes to religious and
educational institutions within the United
States, and only a third goes to the poor. Only
a small fraction goes abroad, only 5% to assist
the poor abroad, only a fraction of that toward
ending starvation, and much of that lost to
overhead. The tax deduction for charitable
giving in the United States appears to enrich
the rich. Some like to count “remittances,” that
is money sent home by migrants living and
working in the United States, or the investment
of any U.S. money abroad for any purpose, as
foreign aid. But there is simply no reason that
private charity, no matter what you believe it
to consist of, could not remain the same or
increase if U.S. public aid were brought closer
to the level of international norms.
Isn’t world starvation and
malnourishment decreasing anyway?
No. Increases in conflicts around the world
and climate-related factors have contributed to
an
increase of 40 million people malnourished
in recent years. Although there has been slow
progress in reducing malnourishment over the
last 30 years, the trends are not encouraging
and
approximately 9 million people die each year
from starvation.
What is the plan to do this?
- Educate the public
- Build a movement
- Enlist support from key Congressional
offices
- Introduce supporting resolutions in the
United Nations, U.S. Congress, governing
bodies of other countries, U.S. state
legislatures, city councils, and civic,
charitable, and faith-based organizations
What You Can Do
Endorse the 3 Percent Plan to End
Starvation on behalf of your organization.
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Views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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