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Upon assuming the G20 presidency last December, South Africa chose “solidarity, equality and sustainability” as its theme. Far from being an empty slogan, this vision reflects the principles on which any credible international response to today’s hunger crisis must rest.
Driven by climate change, conflict and inequality, food insecurity is spiking around the world. The tools to address it already exist. The challenge is to mobilize the political will to act. South Africa’s G20 presidency presents a unique opportunity to do just that.
Brazil offers a valuable model. Over the past two years, it has managed to lift out of food insecurity, removing itself from the UN’s hunger map. To achieve this, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s administration reinstated policies scrapped by his predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro, bolstered school meal programs through procurement from smallholder and indigenous farmers, raised minimum wages and legally recognized the right to food.
None of these measures are experimental. They are tried, tested and proven solutions, and their success shows that eliminating hunger does not hinge on technological innovation but on political courage.
The G20’s top priority should be to consolidate and scale up programs that have already proven effective
Raj Patel and Refiloe Joala
When Brazil held the G20 presidency last year, it sought to export its domestic achievements, most notably by launching the Global Alliance Against Hunger and Poverty. Yet tangible results remain elusive, as many of the alliance’s members — particularly multilateral development banks — continue to promote technical, market-driven fixes that place corporations’ property rights above people’s basic needs.
Instead of launching new initiatives and platforms, the G20’s top priority should be to consolidate and scale up programs that have already proven effective. The Civil Society and Indigenous People’s Mechanism of the UN Committee on World Food Security provides a robust, inclusive space for global debate. What is needed now is a concrete political agenda that enables progressive leaders and public officials to advance domestic antihunger policies.
Admittedly, South Africa does not have much time before handing the G20 presidency to the US — the only member state that has consistently refused to recognize the human right to food. But in the time that remains, it can still champion critical antihunger policy tools.
Four such tools stand out. First, public procurement from local family farms for school meals and food programs strengthens both nutrition and rural livelihoods. Second, buffer stocks and price-stabilization mechanisms can protect consumers from price spikes while safeguarding farmers’ incomes. Third, social protection policies — ranging from living wages and cash transfers to universal benefits — ensure that households can afford healthy diets. Lastly, laws enshrining the right to food could help hold governments accountable if they fail to act.
Equally important, G20 leaders must recognize that they do not need to defer to multilateral development banks’ policy priorities. Through their seats on the boards of these institutions, they already have the power to shift international support away from export-oriented agribusiness toward local food systems and climate-resilient family farming.
If the South African government is serious about promoting a fairer, more sustainable global food system, it should follow the lead of its civil society, which has long been at the forefront of the fight against hunger. Rather than convening yet another round of high-level discussions with little follow-through, it must work to secure public commitments that outlast America’s G20 presidency.
While the wheels of governance often turn slowly, grassroots communities cannot afford to wait
Raj Patel and Refiloe Joala
South African policymakers appear to understand the stakes. At the recent UN Food Systems Summit +4 Stocktake in Addis Ababa, Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen reaffirmed the country’s commitment to food sovereignty. For the first time, the proposed National Food and Nutrition Security Plan recognizes agroecology as a pathway to sustainable agriculture, biodiversity and climate resilience. The Agricultural Research Council has also been tasked with developing a national agroecology framework centered on indigenous crops.
While the wheels of governance often turn slowly, grassroots communities cannot afford to wait. During the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers encountered a vibrant network of 78 smallholder producers, most of them women, who cultivated a wide variety of fruits and vegetables in the KwaZulu-Natal province. By selling their surplus locally, these farmers sustained businesses across the uMgungundlovu District, from bakkie traders and informal market stalls to spaza shops, schools and municipal markets.
This experience demonstrates how localized food systems sustain both livelihoods and communities. Hunger is not defeated in conference halls; the fight is in kitchens, schools and fields. To win, grassroots producers need political backing and the resources to thrive.
The G20 must tackle the hunger crisis head-on or risk forfeiting what remains of its credibility. South Africa can lead the way by putting food justice at the top of its agenda, demonstrating that “solidarity, equality and sustainability” are not abstract ideals but essential for humanity’s survival.
- Raj Patel is a research professor at the University of Texas at Austin and a member of the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems.
- Refiloe Joala coordinates the food sovereignty program at the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation’s Southern Africa Regional Office.
Copyright: Project Syndicate