The forces behind the grain trade
by Peter Hendry
Merchants of Grain by Dan Morgan. Viking Press, New York, 1979,
514.95
A half dozen years ago, when the establishment of an effective
global information system for food supplies was being debated at various
intergovernmental meetings, a frequent warning was that the assembled
information must be processed and circulated to governments in utmost secrecy
lest speculators and profiteering transnational firms obtain such intelligence
and benefit unduly from it. Such fond precautions are brought to mind by
Morgan's impressive detailing of the intricacies of the international grain
trade and, in particular, the operations of five family-owned grain companies
that control so much of it. The image that arises from one well documented
chapter after another is of a close-knit, close-mouthed order of entrepreneurs
aptitude for sensing the slightest winds of change in world grain markets far
surpasses that of any government or group of governments. There is, for
instance, the almost plaintive testimony of a US assistant secretary for
agriculture in support of a tax break for the US-based grain companies: "There
is a US public interest in supporting the companies. They're the ones who keep
us posted as to what's going on all over the world. Their system is ahead of our
system."
Gentlemanly restraint
Merchants of Grain is rich in these touches of irony, and in its
supporting anecdotal material. Too rich, perhaps, for the scholarly minded
seeking quantitative assessments of the international grain trade or more
definitive prescriptions for its better regulation. There are times when
Morgan's fascination with the exotic background of the great grain dynasties
seems almost to get in the way of clearer comprehension. The cast of characters
assembled for the enactment of each new drama in the unfolding grain epic would
do justice to a Russian novel. But Morgan is a journalist, not a theorist, and
he wisely pennits the massive evidence he has assembled to bear its own message
rather than burdening it with judgements and prophecies. The value of his work
lies in the insights provided, certainly for lay readers, but likely for many
specialists as well, into what has hitherto been a murky and much misunderstood
business.
For as long as the cereal deficits of developing countries
remained at modest levels and the surpluses produced elsewhere were usually
managed with a certain degree of gentlemanly restraint by the four major
exporters, no one paid much attention to the activities of Cargill, Continental,
Bunge, Louis Dreyfus and Andre. Yet, as Morgan reveals, it was precisely during
these moribund (as far as the grain trade was concerned) decades that the
companies were strengthening their position through adaptation and
diversification. When the USSR made its massive move into international grain
markets in the summer of 1972, all of the companies, plus the "upstart" Cook
firm of Memphis were quick off the mark, much quicker, as was documented in
Congressional hearings, than the US Department of Agriculture.
On the issue of whether there may have been collusion between
USDA and the grain companies, Morgan's journalistic penchant for focusing on
personalities serves a useful purpose. Did Clarence Palmby, who left his post as
assistant secretary of agriculture to become a vice-president at Continental
during the early stages of the negotiations with the USSR, thereby provide that
company with advantageous inside information? Not likely, says Morgan, and for a
reason already familiar: even as a high-level government official, Palmby
probably had no information that was not already well known at Continental.
On the other hand, Palmby's successor, Carroll Brunthaver, was,
by Morgan's account, exceptionally slow either to grasp or to communicate to
superiors the magnitude of the USSR purchases.
Not surprisingly, these transactions of 1972 serve as a kind of
watershed in Merchants of Grain. But, commendably, these dramatic events are
linked backward into the past and forward nearly to the present. There is a
detailed account, for example, of the frantic but little-known negotiations that
transpired in Ottawa in 1963 when the USSR first showed signs of becoming a
major cereal importer. (The role for US grain in this case was restricted by the
requirement for use of costlier US shipping for half of any transaction, but
this, of course, did not rule out transnational grain firms from supplying the
USSR from other sources.)
Readers seeking conclusive evidence to support convenient
conspiracy theories may be disappointed by Morgan's work; so, too, will be those
expecting some miraculous mechanism for making world grain movements more
responsive to evident human need. Instead, there is Morgan's caustic one-line
comment on inflated earnings and bonuses arising from the hectic transactions of
1973: "Serving 'a great human need' had become a most rewarding activity."
What Morgan has done is to serve us a strong dose of reality:
refreshing, certainly, because it is original rather than a rehash of familiar
ingredients; but definitely tart in the aftertaste when one begins to
contemplate the many pious resolutions and plans of action that have been
formulated by august bodies for the presumed betterment of the world's food
supply system without a glimmer of comprehension of the forces that really shape
the global movements of our most important staple
foods.