1. The paradox
In U.S. news media Bangladesh is usually portrayed as an
"international basketcase," a bleak, desolate scene of hunger and despair. But
when we arrived in Bangladesh in August 1974 we found a lush, green, fertile
land. From the windows of buses and the decks of ferry boats, we looked over a
landscape of natural abundance, everywhere shaped by the hands of men. Rice
paddies carpeted the earth, and gigantic squash vines climbed over the roofs of
the bamboo village houses. The rich soil, plentiful water and hot, humid climate
made us feel as if we had entered a natural greenhouse.
As the autumn days grew clear and cool and the rice ripened in
the fields, we saw why the Bengalis in song and verse call their land "golden
Bengal." But that autumn we also came face to face with the extreme poverty for
which Bangladesh has become so famous. When the price of rice soared in the lean
season before the harvest, we witnessed the terrible spectacle of people dying
in the streets of Dacca, the capital. Famine claimed thousands of lives
throughout the country. The victims were Bangladesh's poorest people who could
not afford to buy rice and had nothing left to sell.
As we tried to comprehend the contrast between the lush beauty
of the land and the destitution of so many people, we sensed that we had entered
a strange battleground. All around us silent struggles were being waged,
struggles in which the losers met slow, bloodless deaths. In 1975 we spent nine
months in the village of Katni, collecting material for a book on life in the
Third World. There we learned more about the quiet violence which rages in
Bangladesh.
Katni is a typical village. The majority of its 350 people are
poor: most families own less than two acres of land, and a quarter of the
households are completely landless. The poorest often work for landlords in
neighboring villages who own over 40 acres apiece. Four-fifths of the villagers
are Muslims and one-fifth are Hindus. Except for two rickshaw pullers, all make
their livings from agriculture.
Bangladesh is rich enough in fertile land, water and
natural gas for fertilizer not only to be self-sufficient in food, but a food
exporter, even with its rapidly increasing population size.
To minimize the differences between ourselves and the villagers,
we lived in a small bamboo house, spoke Bengali and wore local clothing. By
approaching the villagers as equals we were eventually able to win their trust.
Jim spent most of his time talking with the men as they worked in the fields or
went to the market, while Betsy spent most of her time talking with the women as
they worked in and around their houses. The villagers taught us what it means to
be hungry in a fertile land.
Golden Bengal
Bangladesh lies in the delta of three great rivers-the
Brahmaputra, the Ganges and Meghna-which flow through it to empty into the Bay
of Bengal (see map). The rivers and their countless tributaries meander over the
flat land, constantly changing course, since most of the country lies less than
100 feet above sea level. The waters not only wash the land, they create it;
their sediments have built the delta over the centuries. The alluvial soil
deposited by the rivers is among the most fertile in the world.
Abundant rainfall and warm temperatures give Bangladesh an ideal
climate for agriculture. Crops can be grown 12 months a year. The surface waters
and vast underground aquifers give the country a tremendous potential for
irrigation in the dry winter season. The rivers, ponds and rice paddies are
alive with fish; according to a report of the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO), "Bangladesh is possibly the richest country in
the world as far as inland fishery resources are concerned."1
The country's dense human population bears testament to the
land's fertility; historically the thick settlement of the delta, like that
along the Nile River, was made possible by agricultural abundance. Today, with
more than 80 million people, Bangladesh is the world's eighth most populous
nation. Its population density is the highest of any country in the world except
for Singapore and Hong Kong,2 a fact which is all the more remarkable
in light of the country's low level of urbanization. Nine out of 10 Bangladeshis
live in villages, where most make their living from the land.
Bangladesh's soil may be rich, but its people are poor. The
average annual income is less than $100 per person, the life expectancy only 47
years, and like all averages these overstate the wellbeing of the
poorest.3 A quarter of Bangladesh's children die before reaching the
age of five4 .Malnutrition claims many. Over half of Bangladesh's
families consume less than the minimal calorie requirement, and 60 percent
suffer from protein deficiencies.5 Health care is poorly developed
and concentrated in the urban areas. Less than a quarter of the population is
literate.6
A United States Senate study notes that Bangladesh "is rich
enough in fertile land, water, manpower and natural gas for fertilizer not only
to be self-sufficient in food, but a food exporter, even with rapidly increasing
population size."7 But despite rich soil, ideal growing conditions
and an abundant supply of labor, Bangladesh's agricultural yields are today
among the lowest in the world. According to a World Bank document, "Present
average yields of rice are about 1.2 metric tons per hectare, compared with 2.5
tons in Sri Lanka or 2.7 in Malaysia, which are climatically similar, or over 4
tons in Taiwan where labor inputs are greater."8 Production has
stagnated; today's yields are similar to those recorded 50 years
ago.9
Why is a country with some of the world's most fertile land also
the home of some of the world's hungriest people? A look at Bangladesh's history
sheds some light on this paradox. The first Europeans to visit eastern Bengal,
the region which is now Bangladesh, found a thriving industry and a prosperous
agriculture. It was, in the optimistic words of one Englishman, "a wonderful
land, whose richness and abundance neither war, pestilence nor oppression could
destroy."10 But by 1947, when the sun finally set on the British
Empire in India, eastern Bengal had been reduced to an impoverished agricultural
hinterland.
Many who read Food First: ; Beyond the Myth of Scarcity find
among its most shocking revelations the fact that Bangladesh isn't a hopeless
basketcase: there are indeed enough resources in that country to provide for
all. The media-generated image of an entire people condemned to perpetual hunger
is now being challenged. The truth is more hopeful, if paradoxical: despite its
current low productivity, Bangladesh may already produce enough grain for all
its people. Moreover, it has barely tapped its agricultural potential-among the
greatest in the world.
Many people want to learn more about Bangladesh, for they sense,
as we do, that Bangladesh provides lessons with implications well beyond its
national scope. If hunger is needless in this foremost "basketcase," it is
indeed needless in every other country in the world.
Here in Needless Hunger, Betsy Hartmann and James Boyce share
their own direct experiences and lessons drawn from the villages of Bangladesh.
Hartmann and Boyce, Bengali-speaking Americans and Fellows of the Institute for
Food and Development Policy, spent two years (1974-1976) living in Bangladesh
and nine months in one typical rural village. Their growing familiarity with the
daily struggles and conflicts within the village allowed them to cut through the
seeming irrationality of hunger to find its political and economic roots. The
authors describe how the few have gained effective control over productive
resources, leading to both the underuse and misuse of these resources. We learn
of the perceptions, fears and frustrations of those who strain to survive in
rural Bangladesh against the weight of unjust social and economic structure.
But the authors do not only present us with a microscopic view
of Bangladesh society. They describe in concise terms how the local hierarchy is
supported at the national level. Indeed, Hartmann and Boyce demonstrate how we
in the West are directly linked to the very forces that generate hunger in
Bangladesh. The United States, Canada, Great Britain, Norway, Sweden, Holland,
Saudi Arabia, Japan, France, Germany, etc., all have large "development
assistance" programs in Bangladesh. These programs-together with those of the
multilateral agencies like the U. N.'s World Food Program and the World Bank-now
total well over $1 billion a year. Hartmann and Boyce show from their own
on-site investigations that such aid often undermines the very people with whom
we would most wish to ally ourselves - the hungry and impoverished. Similarly,
the authors help us understand that no matter how good our government's
intentions, the massive food aid we are told is for the hungry in fact ends up
feeding and enriching a privileged minority.
But Needless Hunger is not a story without hope. Hartmann and
Boyce reveal the strength and potential of the Bangladesh people. They argue
that social reconstruction could bring genuine economic progress for all. And
they show that there is a way that we in the West can help: we can work to
remove the obstacles to social change being built by forces of intervention
which shore up the hunger status-quo.
The global analysis of our book Food First is vividly captured
here in a single country-in a single village.
Frances Moore LappR>Joseph
Collins