December 06, 2022
I found this to be interesting info: "Post-Soviet Ukraine, with its 32 million arable hectares of rich and fertile black soil (known as "cernozëm”), has the equivalent of one-third of all existing agricultural land in the European Union. With the end of socialist collectivizatio
It is, after all, the
much-touted "breadbasket of Europe,” with an annual production of 64
million tons of grain and seeds, among the world’s largest producers of
barley, wheat and sunflower oil (for the latter, Ukraine produces about
30 percent of the world total). Since the 1990s, the race has been on
for businesses to get their hands on what Jeff Rowe, DuPont’s director
for Europe, describes as "one of the fastest-growing
"Ukraine had been hardest hit by … the "shock therapy” of capitalist
restoration in Eastern Europe and Russia itself,” writes British
economist Michael Roberts about this stage in the country’s history.
Indeed, its economy has suffered: during the 30 years after
independence, incomes and quality of life have remained below 1990
levels and poverty is rampant. Not for everyone, of course – the
"conversion” to capitalism has followed the usual pattern: a class of
oligarchs and a narrow elite have enriched themselves disproportionat
This new nomenklatura is being courted by both Russia and the West with
competing "assistance” packages with strings attached, aimed at keeping
Ukraine in their respective spheres of influence. The tension between
the opposing sides exerting economic influence has been the dynamic
underlying the politics of independent Ukraine from the beginning,
encapsulated in the clash/
With the events of Maidan in 2014, the Western camp prevailed, while Putin retaliated by taking Crimea and waging war in the Donbass. The developments marked the beginning of Ukraine’s "annexation” into the Euro-Atlantic economic sphere, described by Mousseau and Elisabeth Fraser in a 2014 report entitled The Corporate Takeover of Ukrainian Agriculture, which gives an account of the redoubled push by Western financial institutions to "throw open the nation’s vast agricultural sector to foreign corporations.”
From the West came arms and money in the form of assistance packages
from the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development. As usual, the cash was
strongly tied to reforms that Ukraine was required to implement, all
under the banner of fiscal restraint and austerity. Also according to
Mousseau, the drive in Ukraine to privatize the land market is
unprecedented in recent history. To limit unrestrained privatization, a
moratorium on the sale of land to foreigners had been imposed in 2001.
Since then, the repeal of this rule has been a main goal of Western
institutions. As early as 2013, for instance, the World Bank provided
an $89 million loan for the development of a deed and land title
program needed for the commercializati
Furthermore, Western banks are imposing the optimization and consolidation of agribusinesses into large entities at the expense of small producers, who still constitute the majority in the country, with the goal of increasing "added value,” and, in the words of a 2019 World Bank paper, "accelerating private investment in agriculture.” The same report states that "a 30-percent productivity increase in agriculture could result in an additional 4.4 percent Ukrainian GDP growth in five years, and 12.5 percent growth over ten years.” It is safe to assume that the growth rates of private agricultural producers were expected to see far greater increases.
Despite the moratorium on land sales to foreigners, by 2016, ten multinational agricultural corporations had already come to control 2.8 million hectares of land. Today, some estimates speak of 3.4 million hectares in the hands of foreign companies and Ukrainian companies with foreign funds as shareholders. Other estimates are as high as 6 million hectares. The moratorium on sales, which the US State Department, IMF and World Bank had repeatedly called to be removed, was finally repealed by the Zelensky government in 2020, ahead of a final referendum on the issue scheduled for 2024. Furthermore, in January, a report by Usaid, the U.S. Agency for Assistance and Cooperation, lamented the absence of a reliable land market in the country that was limiting economic growth.
This despite the fact that an analysis by Open Democracy published in
October revealed that ten private companies controlled 71 percent of
the Ukrainian agricultural market, including, "in addition to the
Ukrainian oligarchy, multinational corporations such as Archer Daniels
Midland (ADM), Bunge, Cargill, Louis Dreyfus, and the Chinese
state-owned company COFCO.” According to the Oakland Institute’s latest
report on the subject, the list now also includes multinational
corporations such as Luxembourg-base
Among this long list, European companies particularly stand out, and
the role of the EU is increasing, especially after the signing of the
economic association agreement between Ukraine and the European Union
that came into force in 2017. That agreement, denounced at the time by
Russia as a backdoor to facilitating the entry of Western
multinationals,
The war now seems likely to disrupt the current grand neoliberal project in the short term, mainly because of disruptions in the export supply chain. Another unknown concerns how Ukraine’s limitations in its current condition might affect Chinese distribution routes to Europe under China’s Belt & Road plan, to which the country had signed on. Nonetheless, in the context of a global geo-economic realignment for which the war promises to be a crucial turning point, Ukraine can be predicted to remain a major point of focus, albeit in the midst of severe global instability.”
Posted by: Timothy Birdnow at
12:01 PM
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Posted by: jasmin at December 10, 2022 05:03 AM (+exrx)
Posted by: Fake Tag Heuer at May 21, 2023 12:27 AM (SUYyh)
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