Commentary

Published: Friday, March 06, 2009
Bylined to: Arthur Shaw

Cargill may have been Venezuela's leading food distributor ... past tense!

VHeadline commentarist Arthur Shaw writes: Agriculture accounts for approximately 7% of Venezuela's GDP, 13% of the labor force, and at least one-fourth of Venezuela's land area. Although the Revolution has won many big and lasting victories in food production and security, Venezuela is not yet self-sufficient in most areas of agriculture. Venezuela imports about two-thirds of its food. Through November 2006, US imperialists exported $500 million worth of agricultural products to make Venezuela one of the top two US markets in South America ... they supply roughly one-quarter of Venezuela's food imports.

Cargill is the largest privately owned company in the United States. "Privately owned" means its shares of stock aren't traded on any stock exchange and the company therefore doesn't have to report on most of its operations. Thus, we are now unable to watch the effect of the recent expropriation of some of Cargill's assets in Venezuela on the price of its unlisted stock. Were Cargill a publicly-held company in the USA, it would rank in the top 20 companies in the Fortune 500.

The food giant employs or exploits over 160,000 employees at 1,100 locations in 67 countries. It is responsible for 25% of all United States grain exports. The company also supplies approximately 22% of the United States domestic meat market, exporting more meat product from Argentina than any other company and is one of  the world's largest poultry producers. All of the eggs used in McDonald's restaurants in the United States pass through Cargill's plants.

Cargill's strategy in international trade is savage laissez faire capitalism or vile neo-liberalism ... it begs, and gets, lavish farm subsidies from the regime in Washington. Cargill uses these state subsidies to undersell or ruin farmers in other countries. The only way farmers in other countries can deal with unfair or subsidized competition from Cargill and the US regime is to impose tariffs on Cargill imports. So, Cargill and the US regime are strong supporters of "free trade" or ...  in other words ... no protection for the domestic industries in other countries. 

When the farmers in other countries are ruined by unfair or subsidized competition, Cargill rushes in and grabs their land and businesses until it dominates the agricultural base of that country ... as soon as Cargill ascends to become the supreme food power in that country ... discretely hiding behind the impotent local throne, it shows, and uses, its fangs and claws. Cargill enslaves children and works them 16 hours a day ... as it did in Mali and Ivory Coast. Cargill hires death squads to murder and torture striking workers as it did in Colombia. 

[We can show that Colombian death squads attacked striking workers on Cargill's plantations in Colombia. Cargill however claims that the labor strike and the death squad attacks were a coincidence. Neither Cargill nor the death squads have so far confess that an agreement existed between them, as one similarly situated US banana company in Colombia has done.]