Rice Bowls and Revitalization: Navigating China's Complex Food Security Landscape
Introduction
CCP Chairman Xi Jinping has proclaimed that the “Chinese people should hold their rice bowls firmly in their own hands, with grains mainly produced by themselves”. Yet this directly conflicts with his other stated goal of “rural revitalisation”, the effort to identify high value crops and agricultural industries for the purpose of raising farmer’s incomes and to alleviate rural poverty. Such tensions denote the contrast between two old visions of the state's duty to Chinese citizens, with both outlooks sharing little in common with the other.
This is reflective of the dual problems China faces over the coming decades: how to continue on the path of uplifting the rural poor from poverty, whilst simultaneously restricting their choice of crops to core staples in the interest of national food security.
This spotlight presents the problems facing China’s domestic food supply and increasing foreign dependence while discussing the complications caused by goals of both economic uplift of citizens and the long term protection of the nation’s dwindling farmland. Additionally, this spotlight analyses historic trends in Chinese food production and demand and their subsequent effect on global food prices, before reviewing the possible Taiwan-related motivations of the Chinese state.
This spotlight concludes that the proclaimed “guozhidazhe”, meaning a national priority or a main affair of the state, can be considered both as a push for food security while at the same time demonstrating a deliberate decision to prioritise the food security of the urban middle classes over the rural poor, this tradeoff itself having political and social consequences.
Rural Policy Background
The Deng Xiaoping market reforms of the 1980s seem to fade further and further into the rear view mirror as China trundles along towards true self-sufficiency. That’s when collective farms, a staple of most early communist regimes, were split and farmers were permitted to sell any crop they wished at market price.
Current Chairman, Xi Jingping, takes the opposite view, that Chinese farmers must forget the days when premium sellers such as flowers and fruit were harvested on China’s dwindling and already small stocks of arable land. Instead, farmers must focus on harvesting the staples that keep a nation going, a factory’s workers churning, and the nation’s stockpiles ever expanding. As such, China has been building up huge stockpiles in basic foodstuffs such as wheat, rice, and corn (around a year’s national supply of each). This has raised the global price of grain, with China now hoarding over half the world’s supply.
China is not blessed with good conditions for agricultural production. China has long been troubled by famine, with the emperors of antiquity usually looking to fill bellies as the first step to win hearts and minds. Today, China attempts to feed a fifth of humanity with less than 10% of the world’s farmland and only 7% of the world’s fresh water. Despite this, it manages to produce around a quarter of the world’s grain and ranks first across the globe for the production of cereals, fruit, vegetables, meat, poultry, eggs, and fishery products.
China's food security strategy today faces several challenges and trade-offs. One of them is the dilemma between increasing farmer's incomes and promoting the production of basic foodstuffs over cash crops. Cash crops are crops that are grown for sale rather than for domestic consumption, such as cotton, tobacco, tea, and fruits. Cash crops can provide higher returns for farmers and stimulate rural development, but they also compete with food crops for land, water, and other resources. This is causing confusion and resentment on the ground, where generations of shifting national priorities have been felt in the pockets of China’s rural population.
Another challenge is the dependence of China's food security on the stability of the global food market and the geopolitical situation. China is the world's largest importer of agricultural products, including soybeans, corn, wheat, rice, and dairy products. Between 2000 and 2020, the country’s food self-sufficiency ratio decreased from 93.6 percent to 65.8 percent. This is predominantly due to changing diet patterns with imports of edible oils, sugar, meat, and processed foods increasing.
This has been spurred on by the increasingly large Chinese urban middle class. More concerned with food safety than their parents, and dismayed from Chinese brands by decades of little to no strict food safety regulations in the country, these people turn increasingly to internationally imported goods. Additionally, there have been many contaminated and unsafe food scandals in China this side of the millennium, for example a large proportion of parents are still loyal to foreign baby formula as the result of six babies dying and hundreds of thousands being poisoned as a result of contaminated domestically produced formula in 2008.
China is also the largest producer of meat on the planet as stated earlier. This has been achieved by diverting many of the basic foodstuffs to livestock instead of to humans. China consumes around 175 million tonnes of corn in animal feed each year and imports approximately 100 million tonnes of soybeans to also use in animal feed. The growing urban middle class has increased demand for animal products domestically, such that corn used for animal feeds tripled from around 20% in the 1960s to 64% by 1994. This has contributed to state concerns over food security, with more of the staples going to livestock than ever before and the population's nutritional intake increasing in complexity. The reliance on imported food to meet those needs presents China with a problem, not just in terms of quantity for those at the bottom, but also in terms of quality and variety for those in the newly established middle class. China, therefore, is aiming to increase staple harvests not just to meet the needs of the population in terms of calories but also in terms of happiness and nutrition in an evermore complex and dangerous world the CCP perceives in the face of climate and geopolitical threats.
Additionally, it is difficult for food producers to make any meaningful profit farming staples, due to the price controls instituted from the top down. Therefore, another of Xi’s policy staples seems set for the chopping block. Xi has identified the uplifting of the rural poor as a priority for the CCP by allowing them to grow crops of high market value and invest in profitable agricultural industries to achieve rural revitalisation.
China has further diversified its uses for corn into the production of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS). Reforms in the mid-2010s led to a mass sell-off of the nation’s then corn reserves and allowed for HFCS output to increase and for idle capacity to be reignited. HFCS sells for around a third of the price of natural sugar in China and garners a fifth of the domestic sweetener market. Chinese HFCS has also been exported abroad and disrupted the sugar industries of a number of southeast Asian states, with already declining sugar consumption causing concern in the Philippines where sugar cane harvests regularly outstrip demand and where around half of Chinese HFCS ends up. As the CCP pushes for more corn to be grown domestically and therefore be bought within strict price controls, the HFCS industry may further disrupt the growth in sugar demand awaited by many burgeoning economies in the region, particularly India, Indonesia, and Vietnam where imports of Chinese HFCS rank just behind the Philippines.
The Filipino government enacted trade restrictions on Chinese HFCS to protect domestic sugar production, further export of HFCS will increase tensions, place economic pressure on a key Filipino national industry, and inflame tensions in the region.
However, many question what happened to the “Grain to Green” goal set in the 1990s of planting forests to counter soil erosion and limit desertification. China’s food dependence is predicted to continue increasing, as a result of arable land loss. China in 2019 only possessed 95% of the arable land it held in 2013, this has been attributed to overuse of fertilisers, neglect of land, and climate change. Extreme weather, environmental degradation, water scarcity, and pollution all look to be ready to make the problem worse in the coming years and decades. Researchers from both China and the US judged that climate change and the loss of parts of the ozone layer were responsible for a 10% drop in average crop yields from 1981 to 2010.
The implications for global commodities
A fifth of humanity drastically changing the quantities and types of food they eat has unsurprisingly had major effects on the global price of food in the past. The food price hike of 2007-2008 pushed approximately 400 million people into poverty worldwide and was partly blamed by many on China and India’s rising demand for foreign agriculture leading to increased consumer competition on international markets and therefore higher prices.
However, if China stays on course to increase the amount of food produced domestically, at least in the short to medium term, based on the lack of attention paid to the slowly dwindling supply of arable land, then demand internationally for agricultural commodities like wheat, rice, and corn is bound to fall, possibly leading to a reduction in prices for these basic products and the foodstuffs they produce in combination with other materials and ingredients. Some of the poorest and most import-dependent countries on Earth should expect less competition at the table from now on as China prioritises the stomachs of its people over its farmers’ wallets.
Why Change So Much So Quickly?
China’s buildup of stockpiles on top of increasing domestic food production has many analysts worried. With tensions over Taiwan at a high, it raises the possibility that China’s move to increase food security is an attempt to prepare for future US-led sanctions and blockades as a consequence of invading what it considers to be a rebel province.
Alternatively, the justifications of the policy make sense in the opposite terms, not that conflict is planned but that shocks to the global food system, such as the collapse of the Ukraine Russia grain deal of which China was a major beneficiary, are only expected to increase as a result of conflicts in the region, or on the other side of the world.
It can be easily understood that the push for national food security is one caused by external factors alone, but the initiative’s counteraction against ideals of rural revitalisation demonstrate a definite domestic consequence and a readjustment of the urban/rural political and economic relationship in China. Even as improved physical and digital infrastructure draw the educated and successful back to small towns and villages, there has been very little progress towards bridging the urban/rural divide. In 1995, urban workers made three times their rural counterparts, today the ratio is roughly the same even in the face of government efforts to close the gap.
The realignment taking place, for farmers to grow low income but highly needed crops to keep both basic food prices low and maintain a steady supply of cheap other foodstuffs such as meat and sweetener, illuminates China’s prioritisation of the urban middle classes with more complex dietary expectations over the farmers and rural poor reaching to claim their share of the Chinese dream.
Conclusion
China's dual objectives of ensuring food security and promoting rural revitalisation underscore a complex challenge. Balancing the imperative for self-sufficiency with the need to uplift rural communities reveals tensions between historical legacies, socioeconomic aspirations, and global realities. The intricate interplay between these goals not only impacts China's domestic landscape but also resonates internationally through changing trade dynamics and geopolitical considerations. The nation's journey to navigate these complexities will define its agricultural trajectory, with far-reaching implications for both its citizens and the global community.
Image credit: Colin W via Wikimedia Commons