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PHILIPPINES: Hungry for Rice, Unwilling to Invest
By Prime Sarmiento
MANILA - When the price of rice nearly doubled to about 90 US cents per kilo, two months ago, Liza Valino put cheaper substitutes like bananas and sweet potatoes on the table to feed her family of ten. But no one was satisfied.
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ECONOMY-PERU: Easier to Extract Minerals than Accounting Information
By Milagros Salazar
LIMA - Sixty-six percent of the Peruvian state’s revenue from the extractive industries does not appear on government accounts. Parliament is taking a hand in the matter amid pressure from oil, gas and mining companies for the government to flout an international agreement on transparency.
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TRADE: ‘Increased Foreign Investment Will Not Lift All Boats’
By Chris Arsenault
VANCOUVER - Paul Moist, the President of Canada’s largest union, expressed concern about a free trade deal between Canada and Colombia during a recent meeting with Fabio Valencio, Colombia’s Minister of the Interior.
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PERU: Seeking Ways to Remedy Unequal Distribution of Mining Taxes
By Milagros Salazar
LIMA - The Peruvian parliament is studying ways to improve the distribution of the "canon minero", the portion of the taxes paid by mining companies that is transferred to the regions, in order to benefit the country’s poorest provinces.
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ECONOMY: Oil Not Costly Enough to Prompt Needed Changes - Experts
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Just about everyone is complaining about the high price of oil, but it does not even reflect the environmental costs and is still insufficient to promote the changes needed to ensure a less catastrophic future for humanity, experts warn.
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COLOMBIA: Women Working Abroad Keep Provincial Economy Alive
By Helda Martínez
PEREIRA, Colombia - The so-called Coffee Belt region accounts for 60 percent of Colombians who leave the country, and the majority of those leaving are female. Once they are abroad, these women become the breadwinners of their families, with the resulting impact on household income extending to the provincial economy.
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PERU: President Turns Blind Eye to Price Rises
By Ángel Páez
LIMA - "War on the people by the oil producing companies and countries" is to blame for today’s soaring food prices and for the fact that poor people in Peru are not benefiting from the economic growth, said Peruvian President Alan García.
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ARGENTINA: Soy - High Profits Now, Hell to Pay Later
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - At a time when the price of soy, Argentina’s main export crop, has reached record levels on the international markets, family agriculture experts and environmental groups are warning about its severe social and environmental effects.
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TRADE: Subsidies (and Food Prices) Soar at Doha
By Gustavo Capdevila
GENEVA - Bias in the WTO proposals to reform agricultural trade, which are being analysed for the second consecutive week, will definitely aggravate the food crisis caused in recent months by the high prices of farm commodities, according to Aftab Alam Khan, an expert with the non-governmental organisation ActionAid.
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POLITICS-ARGENTINA: Cristina At A Crossroads
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - Following a major parliamentary defeat, the Argentine government is pondering whether to accept the reversal and negotiate with farmers’ associations, or to pursue its export tax policy that these organisations have rejected. Experts say this would put government institutional stability at risk.
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AGRICULTURE-ARGENTINA: Rival Rallies Disagree On More Than Taxes
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - Two major rallies took place in the Argentine capital, one for supporters of the government’s decision to increase the export tax on oilseeds, and the other for those in favour of farming associations, which have been opposing the tax measure for four months.
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ASIA: Rice Prices Add to Inflation Woes
By Bruce Lim
BANGKOK - In Singapore, where almost 100 percent of foodstuff is imported, the government has allowed private importers to increase buffer stocks. The Philippines, the world’s largest importer of rice, has been busy shopping for the grain from producers such as China and Pakistan.
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OIL-CARIBBEAN: Petrocaribe Building ‘Anti-Crisis, Anti-Hunger Shield’
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - Seventeen countries in Central America and the Caribbean are to make down payments of only 40 percent on Venezuelan oil, while cooperating to expand their food supply, and calling on the North to take measures to curb speculation on futures markets, which is resulting in surging crude prices.
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FINANCE: Lobbyists Enlist Public in Commodities Speculation Fight
By Abid Aslam
WASHINGTON - Energy traders and oil-consuming businesses are enlisting the public in a tug-of-war over proposals to tame fuel and other commodity prices.
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DEVELOPMENT: 'Planet Burns While G8 Fiddles'
By Ramesh Jaura
TOYAKO, Japan - While the world's major industrialised nations expressed satisfaction over their three-day summit meetings that concluded Wednesday, non-governmental organisations, after some early and limited approval, were deeply disappointed with the outcome on the whole.
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Food, grains, metals. In a new world of rising prices, commodities are back on the global agenda. But can extractive industries and agriculture help reduce poverty? They have been touted as a tool for development; however, in some cases commodities have flourished in contexts of corruption, conflict and ecological destruction, damaging people's lives and opportunities, while benefiting elites and foreign companies. Growing demand pushes prices up, enabling Africa and Latin America to profit from the formidable expansion of Asian economies. IPS reports on the perspectives and pitfalls of the remarkable upswing.

News in RSS
WHAT'S BEHIND SOARING COMMODITY PRICES
    by Jose Graziano da Silva
MAY 2008 (IPS) - There are two distinct elements driving the current commodity price increases: one is financial; the other is the hitherto unheard of shift in demand: the expansion of consumption in poor countries, writes Jose Graziano da Silva, regional representative for Latin America and the Caribbean at the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO).
MAKING HIGH COMMODITY PRICES HELP THE POOREST NATIONS
    by Ali Mchumo
APRIL 2008 (IPS) - Since 2001, the prices of many commodities and other natural resources have soared, providing commodity-dependent developing countries with an opportunity to use the increased revenues to combat poverty and make real economic and social gains, writes Ambassador Ali Mchumo, managing director of the Common Fund for Commodities (CFC).
News in RSS
BRAZIL: Setting an Important Precedent for Indigenous Lands
CULTURE-SOUTH AFRICA: Crafts That Steal Hearts All Over the World
POLITICS-COTE D'IVOIRE: Anti-Xenophobia Law Gets Lukewarm Reception
SOUTH AFRICA: Measuring the Carbon Footprint of Fruit and Wine
ASIA: Rock Star's Expulsion Says No to Child Sex Tourists
POLITICS-US: McCain's Plan to Privatise Veterans' Health Care
CHINA: Agony Turns Ecstasy as Gold Medals Pile Up
MIDDLE EAST: In the Race for Renewable Energy Sources
BOLIVIA: Businesses Take On the Green Challenge
PORTUGAL: Easing Food Safety Standards for Traditional Products
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