OPINION
THE
EDITORIAL BOARD
The World Has a Choice: Work Together or Fall
Apart
June 18,
2022, 8:24 a.m. ET
By The
Editorial Board
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/18/opinion/inflation-global-food-shortage-ukraine.html
It is a
natural human impulse, and a political one, to turn inward when threatened by a
crisis that appears beyond our control. The world is facing several such forces
at once: food shortages, inflation, the persistence of Covid-19 and the effects
of global warming. Taken together, they threaten the stability and prosperity
of nations around the world. That threat could hasten the retreat that many
countries are already making away from globalization and international
cooperation.
This is the
wrong lesson to draw. Covid, climate change and now the specter of a global
food crisis show clearly that the world’s problems are intimately linked, as
are solutions. The power of cooperation has been on display in the coordinated
response to Russia’s aggression. More cooperation, not less, is required to
navigate a path forward through other crises.
That’s true
even for inflation, an acute problem that Americans, like people in so many
other countries, look to their national governments to solve. Inflation is
higher than at any other time since the early 1980s, meaning that many people
can’t afford to keep buying the same goods and services. Republicans have
sought to put the blame for rising prices on the federal government, for
overstimulating the domestic economy with relief funds in response to the
pandemic, and economic analysts generally agree this has played a role.
The U.S.
central bank, the Federal Reserve, which is charged with keeping inflation
under control, was initially slow to respond. But it is now moving urgently to
cool demand for goods and services by raising borrowing costs. On Wednesday,
the Fed raised its benchmark interest rate by 0.75 percentage point, an
unusually large jump.
High
inflation in other developed economies underscores that the rise in prices is a
global phenomenon, one that is caused in large part by global disruptions in
the flow of oil, food and other goods. As the Fed squeezes demand, the Biden
administration can ease the economic pain by working to expand the availability
of goods and services. Some of the obstacles are domestic: America needs to get
serious about building more housing, for example, the single largest expense
for most American families.
Others are
global: The White House needs to put its shoulder to the work of expanding the
global production of energy, both through encouraging the near-term extraction
of fossil fuels and by investing in the development of sustainable sources of
energy. We also have called for President Biden to end his blanket tariffs on
imports from China, a move the administration is reportedly considering.
The United
States can help itself and the rest of the world by working with other nations
— especially the countries in Africa, the Middle East and South Asia that are
most at risk — to address a major impending food crisis. Shortages are already
acute in parts of Africa, and some of the reasons are well known: the extreme
weather of climate change, the economic ravages of Covid-19, the inequality of
resources. But a new and devastating problem has been created by Russia’s cruel
war on Ukraine.
Ukraine is
the fourth-largest exporter of grain and seeds in the world, mostly corn and
wheat, but with its ports either occupied or blockaded by Russia, its ability
to ship its grain has been sharply reduced. It is essential to get the
Ukrainian grain moving. Much of it normally goes to developing countries facing
the worst food shortages, and Ukrainian silos have to be emptied to make room
for grain about to be harvested.
Add a host
of other war-related factors — sanctions on Belarus and Russia that have curbed
the world’s supply of a key fertilizer, potash; granaries destroyed by Russian
shelling; countries like India cutting off most wheat exports to make sure,
understandably, that their own needs are met — and it becomes evident that
Vladimir Putin’s war is having devastating repercussions on food supplies and
prices far beyond Ukraine’s borders.
As is so
often the case, it is the poorest countries that suffer the sharpest blow, and
history shows that hunger can quickly turn lethal. Nigeria, Somalia, Ethiopia,
Egypt and Yemen are already feeling the pain of food shortages, The Washington
Post notes; rising prices have set off protests in Argentina, Indonesia,
Tunisia and Sri Lanka, among other countries.
The largest
constraint to the export of Ukrainian grain is the country’s inability to use
its primary Black Sea port, Odesa. Ukraine has instead tried to ship its grain
by road, rail and river, but these methods fall far short of what would be
exported through Ukrainian ports. Before the Russian invasion, Ukraine was
exporting an average of 3.5 million tons of grain per month. That fell to
300,000 tons in March and went up to a little over one million tons in April.
Odesa could
handle the volume, and it is still under Ukrainian control. The problem is the
warships and mines blocking shipping. Russia has indicated that it is prepared
to open a secure channel out of Odesa, but it would expect the lifting of some
sanctions in exchange. The United States and its allies have resisted lifting
any sanctions; Ukrainians say Russia cannot be trusted.
Time is
fast running out. The winter wheat is ripe, and about 25 million tons of grain,
according to United Nations estimates, in Ukraine could rot if it isn’t
exported soon. Even an immediate agreement to clear the way to Odesa would
require weeks to arrange a large flotilla willing to take the risk of entering
a war zone and pay for the necessary insurance and escort. Using NATO ships
could create the danger of a direct confrontation with Russian warships, which
the Western allies have been intent on avoiding.
The U.N.
secretary general, António Guterres, has said that “there is no effective
solution to the food crisis without reintegrating Ukraine’s food production, as
well as the food and fertilizer produced by Russia and Belarus, into world
markets, despite the war.” He suggested, in effect, that the United States and
Europe relax the existing sanctions on Russian and Belarusian agriculture
exports in exchange for letting Ukrainian grain flow unimpeded to the world.
There is
merit in trying to put world food supplies above the exigencies of conflict,
but easing the sanctions that Russia is demanding — those imposed on Russian
exports and financial transactions, as a Russian deputy foreign minister,
Andrei Rudenko, said on state media — would mean giving in to Russia’s
aggression and attempt at humanitarian blackmail.
What might
yet work is a joint appeal to Mr. Putin by the countries that stand to be most
affected by the food crisis. Mr. Putin has met separately with the leaders of
Turkey, Israel and the African Union, among others, and has insisted publicly
that responsibility for the emerging global food and energy crises falls
entirely on Western greed and Western sanctions. He repeated that message
forcefully in a speech on Friday at the St. Petersburg International Economic
Forum, blaming the United States for the world’s instability.
But he may
find it harder to brush off an appeal from nations that are threatened by
hunger, especially those that have so far resisted Western pressures to join in
the ostracism of Russia. The United States should encourage and support such an
appeal, which would get these countries involved in a way that serves their critical
interests. And if an appeal includes a proposal to provide an escort of ships
flying Ukrainian flags, Ukraine might feel less distrustful.
International
trust and cooperation are in desperately short supply, but it’s the only way
out of any of these intertwined crises. The Biden administration should see
this moment as a critical one for America’s leadership in the world, and step
up to meet it.
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