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Soaring food
prices hit Asia anti-poverty drive: ADB
MANILA—Soaring food prices have hampered Asia’s fight against poverty
and some countries may need foreign aid to feed their hungry millions,
the Asian Development Bank president said Friday.
“The current food price inflation has already affected the pace of
poverty reduction in some countries,” Haruhiko Kuroda said. “Poverty
reduction has been very rapid in many Asian economies but the current
high food price inflation has really affected poor people in the region,
particularly in low income countries like Bangladesh.”
Bangladesh could potentially require outside help and the Manila-based
ADB was ready to assist it and other low-income Asian countries that may
have to spend more to help their poorest citizens, Kuroda said.
Kuroda said inflation was the most immediate threat to developing Asia’s
economic growth and that it was impacting heavily on the more than 600
million Asians still living on a dollar a day or less. Vietnam, Cambodia
and the former Soviet republics in central Asia now have double-digit
inflation. Some economies would do well to allow their currencies to
rise to cool prices, he said. A stronger currency helps to make food
imports cheaper.
“All of them are relatively small countries and that means controlling
inflation is very difficult,” he told a news conference in Manila.
“Governments are well advised to refrain from using trade measures or
price control measures to address this food price inflation issue,” he
said.
“The best way is to provide targetted income support for the needy poor,
particularly in South Asia and in some parts of Southeast Asia” where
the poorest spend more than half their income on food, he added. Kuroda
said some countries in the region suffered from large fiscal deficits
“and may need some help from ADB.” He said the lender was ready to
provide loans as budgetary support for “targetted assistance to the
poor,” although he said no ADB member country had yet sought aid from
the bank.
Many Asian nations had lost out from the rising cost of food imports and
countries such Bangladesh “may” eventually seek budgetary support,
Kuroda said. Some countries, such as China, were in a strong position to
allow their currencies to rise and should do so to help ease the pain
from higher-priced food imports, he said. Thailand, the Philippines and
Malaysia have partially “insulated their economies from global commodity
inflation” by allowing their currencies to rise in the last few years,
he said. However, he said “that may not be so good” for some countries
such as Vietnam that have a large current account deficit. While a
steady stream of foreign direct investment has largely helped Hanoi,
“allowing the currency to appreciate substantially might undermine
competitiveness and that might further increase the current account
deficit.”
China, with a huge current account surplus and a very competitive
economy, “has been allowing (its) currency to appreciate faster,” he
said. Longer term, Kuroda said the solution to high food prices was
raising productivity through increased government investments in the
farm sector.
The ADB was a key player in infrastructure development in Asia and would
help member countries with irrigation, electricity, roads and other
infrastructure that could boost farm production, he said.—Agencies
APP adds, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani Friday said Pakistan
greatly values the support by Asian Development Bank (ADB) and for the
development work it carried out for the people’s uplift. Talking to the
visiting delegation of Asian Development Bank (ADB) headed by Juan
Miranda, DG CWRD at PM House, the Prime Minster appreciated the active
support of ADB for Pakistan in the past and hoped for the cooperation to
continue.
Gilani said ADB should assist in building new dams, improvement in
economy and food production. The Prime Minister mentioned the areas
needing speedy implementation including construction of farm to market
road network, development of urban and rural areas, provisions of
equitable economic opportunities as well as improving health and
education facilities.
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