| PALENCIA, Guatemala, December
28, 2004, NY Times via CropChoice. com: Mario Chinchilla,
his face shaded by a battered straw hat, worriedly surveyed his
field of sickly tomatoes. His hands and jeans were caked with dirt,
but no amount of labor would ever turn his puny crop into the plump,
unblemished produce the country's main supermarket chain displays
in its big stores.
For a time, the farmer's cooperative he heads managed to sell vegetables
to the chain, part owned by the giant Dutch multinational, Ahold,
which counts Stop & Shop among its assets. But the co-op's members
lacked the expertise, as well as the money to invest in the modern
greenhouses, drip irrigation and pest control that would have helped
them meet supermarket specifications.
Squatting next to his field, Mr. Chinchilla's rugged face was a
portrait of defeat. "They wanted consistent supply without
ups and downs," he said, scratching the soil with a stick.
"We didn't have the capacity to do it."
Across Latin America, supermarket chains partly or wholly owned
by global corporate goliaths like Ahold, Wal-Mart and Carrefour
have revolutionized food distribution in the short span of a decade
and have now begun to transform food growing, too.
The megastores are popular with customers for their lower prices,
choice and convenience. But their sudden appearance has brought
unanticipated and daunting challenges to millions of struggling,
small farmers.
The stark danger is that increasing numbers of them will go bust
and join streams of desperate migrants to America and the urban
slums of their own countries. Their declining fortunes, economists
and agronomists fear, could worsen inequality in a region where
the gap between rich and poor already yawns cavernously and the
concentration of land in the hands of an elite has historically
fueled cycles of rebellion and violent repression.
"It's like being on a train with a glass on a table and it's
about to fall off and break," said Prof. Thomas Reardon, an
agricultural economist at Michigan State University. "Everyone
sees the glass on the table - but do they see it shaking? Do they
see the edge? The edge is the structural changes in the market."
In the 1990's supermarkets went from controlling 10 to 20 percent
of the market in the region to dominating it, a transition that
took 50 years in the United States, according to researchers at
Michigan State and the Latin American Center for Rural Development
in Santiago, Chile.
Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica and Mexico are furthest along.
While the changes have happened more slowly in poorer, more rural
Central American countries, they have begun to quicken here, too.
In Guatemala, the number of supermarkets has more than doubled in
the past decade, as the share of food they retail has reached 35
percent.
The hope that small farmers would benefit by banding together in
business-minded associations has not been borne out. Some like Aj
Ticonel, in the city of Chimaltenango, have succeeded. But the evidence
suggests that the failure of Mr. Chinchilla's co-op is the more
common fate.
Its feeble attempts to sell to major supermarkets illustrate how
the odds are stacked against small farmers, as well as the uneven
effects of globalization itself. Many small farmers in the region
are getting left behind, while medium-sized and larger growers,
with more money and marketing savvy, are far more likely to benefit.
Most fruits and vegetables in the region are still sold in small
shops and open-air markets, but the value of supermarket purchases
from farmers has soared and now surpasses that of produce exports
by two and half times, researchers say.
The bottom line: supermarkets and their privately set standards
already loom larger for many farmers than the rules of the World
Trade Organization.
Still, stiff competition from foreign growers is also quite real.
To enter the supermarkets of Guatemala's dominant supermarket chain,
La Fragua - part of a holding company one-third owned by Ahold -
is to understand why Professor Reardon likens them to a Trojan horse
for foreign goods.
At La Fragua's immense distribution center in Guatemala City, trucks
back into loading docks, where electric forklifts unload apples
from Washington State, pineapples from Chile, potatoes from Idaho
and avocados from Mexico.
The produce is trucked from here to the chain's supermarkets, which
now span the country. Scenes at a mall in Guatemala City anchored
by Maxi Bodega, one of the company's stores, suggest the evolving
nature of grocery shopping for Latin America's 512 million people.
On the ground floor was a sprawling, old-fashioned produce market.
At the entry, there was a shrine to its patron saint, the Virgin
of Rosario, who had plastic flowers sprinkled at her queenly feet.
The sound of women patting out tortillas and the sweet smells of
ripe tropical fruits drifted through the market as people stopped
to squeeze the avocados, sniff the pineapples and haggle for cheaper
oranges.
To go upstairs was to leave Guatemala behind and enter a mall that
could be in Bangkok or New York, with its synthetic Christmas wreaths,
cheap clothing stores and oversized discount packages of napkins
and symmetrical tomatoes in plastic trays at the Maxi Bodega.
The Baldetti family exemplified the generational change unfolding
here.
Delia Baldetti, an 81-year-old housewife, will only shop for produce
amid the heaps of tomatoes, chilies and papayas where she can bargain
to her heart's content. Her daughter Elsa, a 56-year-old painter,
shops both here and at Maxi Bodega, while Elsa's daughter, a 36-year-old
business administrator, only has time for the supermarket.
Elsa wistfully predicted that while the country's fragrant, raucous
markets will never disappear, they will diminish.
"We'll lose some of our identity," she said. "We're
copying the foreigners."
Farmers who do not or cannot afford to change fast enough to meet
the standards set by supermarkets are threatened.
The tiny farming community of Lo de Silva clings to a steep, verdant
hillside. Slanting cornstalks look as if they would slide into the
valley if they were not rooted to the earth.
Some of the more than 300 farmers who originally belonged to Mr.
Chinchilla's co-op, the Association of Small Irrigation Users of
Palencia - known by its Spanish acronym, Asumpal - were from this
village. Only eight remain. The only product they still sell is
salad tomatoes - and they sell to middlemen, not supermarkets.
Josè Luis Pèrez Escobar, 44, a member of the co-op,
scratched out a living for 20 years from his small field, perched
in the clouds here.
But after his potato crop failed last year, he migrated to the
United States to save his land from foreclosure by the bank, leaving
his wife, MarÌa Graciela Lorenzana, and their five children
behind. He now works the graveyard shift at a golf course in Texas
for $6 an hour so he can pay his debts.
He had dreamed his cooperative would help him escape poverty by
selling directly to the supermarkets. "It would be magnificent,"
Mrs. Lorenzana recalled of that more hopeful time. "The small
farmer would not need a middleman. But he was never able to achieve
it."
A transformation begins
The transformation of Latin America's food retailing system began
in the 1980's and accelerated in the 1990's as countries opened
their economies, often to satisfy conditions for loans from the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. As foreign investment
flooded in, multinational retailers bought up domestic chains or
entered joint ventures with them.
Most concern about the perils of globalization for local farmers
has focused on unfair trade competition from heavily subsidized
American and European producers.
But increasingly, supermarkets also leave small farmers exposed
as the stores spread from big cities to small towns, from well-to-do
enclaves to working-class neighborhoods, from richer countries to
poorer ones.
The chains now dominate sales of processed foods and their share
of produce sales is growing. In Guatemala, supermarkets still control
only 10 to 15 percent of fruit and vegetable sales. But in Argentina,
their slice has grown to as much as 30 percent, while in Brazil
they control half the market, according to Professor Reardon.
As the chains' market share expands, farmers who are shut out find
themselves forced to retreat to shrinking rural markets.
The changes would not be so troubling if the region's economies
were growing robustly and generating decent jobs for globalization's
losers. After all, supermarkets are providing consumers with cheaper,
cleaner places to buy food, economists say.
"It would be an appealing transformation of the sector if
alternative jobs could be made available," said Samuel Morley,
an economist at the International Food Policy Research Institute
in Washington.
But economic growth has not kept pace with rising populations.
The number of people living below poverty lines in Latin America
has risen from 200 million in 1990 to 224 million this year. More
than 6 in 10 people living in rural areas are still poor.
Given the difficulties small farmers face in doing business with
multinational corporations, traditional strategies, like providing
peasants with fertilizer and improved seeds, now seem quaint here.
Professor Reardon and Julio A. Berdeguè, an agronomist who
heads the Latin American Center for Rural Development, are collaborating
with supermarket researchers across Asia and Africa, as well as
Latin America, to document the trends.
In addition, a team at Michigan State has financing from the United
States Agency for International Development to help small farmers
in Central America, India and Kenya sell to supermarkets. They and
other development experts are brainstorming about what to do.
Among the ideas: Regulations requiring that farmers be paid promptly.
Enforcement of laws meant to curtail monopolies and oligopolies,
including mergers of supermarket chains. Improved security and cleanliness
at open-air markets. Infusions of credit and technical expertise
for co-ops.
But while such cooperatives are almost certainly necessary if small
growers are to amass the clout and scale to sell to multinational
chains, they have been a disappointment so far.
Even in economically vibrant Chile, which has invested $1.5 billion
in small-scale farming since 1990, a study of 750 farmer organizations
found that 8 of 10 had failed or survived only with continuous infusions
of government aid.
Mr. Berdeguè, author of the Chile study, had sought to make
the associations work in the 1990's when he was a senior government
official there. The pressure from the I.M.F. and the World Bank
to allow greater foreign investment was intended to make Latin American
economies more competitive.
"But the model did not have a social dimension at the real
center," he said. "It was trickle-down economics."
An experiment disappoints
Mr. Chinchilla, 46, drove his battered, 20-year-old pickup, laden
with crates of tomatoes, into his cooperative's spacious packing
shed. The building and the business are in decay.
The water had been cut off. Toilets no longer flushed. The roof
was missing over the bathroom, its floor covered with bird droppings.
The live-in caretakers who sort the co-op's tomatoes had only an
open pail of rainwater to wash their hands. They wore no gloves
while handling the fruit.
Typically, each farmer is growing less than an acre of salad tomatoes
in rustic greenhouses that are fast deteriorating. Their production
has plummeted because of the blight that dries out the plants, which
then yield very small tomatoes.
"We haven't found a solution," Marìa Antonietta
Muralles, a co-op member, said with a shrug. "Maybe it's the
water."
Mr. Chinchilla treated his plants with pesticides to no effect.
"You can't fight it with chemicals," he said. Maybe the
soil itself is infected, they speculated.
"Everything costs money," he explained - money he does
not have and cannot afford to borrow at the going rate of 21 percent.
"When you don't have access to credit, you can't expand,"
he said. "We don't want anything given to us, but we need a
hand."
As the farmers talked, two workers separated tomatoes by size,
with the shrunken ones far too numerous. But their co-op's hopes
of selling to big supermarket chains withered well before the plants.
The co-op got started in the late 1990's, with a small grant from
the government to upgrade the packing shed. An agronomist, Candelario
Lûpez, was given a two-year contract, also at government expense,
to advise them.
Over the next couple of years, Mr. Lûpez helped the co-op
get its foot in the door with La Fragua and C.S.U., another major
supermarket chain. The chains have since united to become the Central
American Retail Holding Company, with 332 stores and almost $2 billion
in sales in 2003. It is one-third owned by Ahold, which had more
than $68 billion in sales last year.
But the co-op did not manage to supply the big chains for long.
The farmers themselves were uncomfortable with the rules of the
supermarket game. They found it difficult to wait weeks to get paid.
They did not want to sell their vegetables on the books and pay
taxes that sharply cut profits. And some of what they supplied was
rejected as too bruised or too limp or too ripe.
The co-op's leaders said they quit selling to C.S.U. through its
dedicated wholesaler in 2000 after two container loads of vegetables
got held up for days at the Nicaraguan border, severely damaging
the produce. "We weren't prepared to absorb that kind of loss,"
said Marco Tulio Alvizures, who then headed the co-op.
Perhaps more fundamental, co-op members had trouble consistently
delivering the quantity and quality of produce the supermarkets
demanded, a problem Mr. Chinchilla readily acknowledged.
In the case of La Fragua, Mr. Alvizures contended that the chain
never gave the co-op a chance to sell the amount it was capable
of. But Jorge Gonzlez, the chain's manager for vegetables, said
the small orders likely reflected La Fragua's judgment, based on
weekly evaluations, that the co-op was not up to the task. The co-op
was such a small supplier that Mr. Gonzlez could not recall all
the details of their dealings.
The corporate imperative is to reward suppliers who consistently
provide what the chain requires. If the vegetables do not arrive,
shelves stand empty. "We punish farmers very hard if they don't
deliver what we order," said Bernardo Roehrs, a spokesman for
the chain.
As the co-op members sought to navigate the difficult new world
of supermarkets, they lost the critical guidance of Mr. Lûpez,
the agronomist, when his contract expired in 2001. He is now a salesman
for a company that makes high-tech greenhouses the co-op's farmers
could never afford.
A rare success story
Not too far from Palencia, in the city of Chimaltenango, is Aj
Ticonel, an association of small farmers that has thrived because
it has something Mr. Chinchilla's co-op lacked: a shrewd and enterprising
businessman to run it.
But even for a savvy company like Aj Ticonel, success came not
from supplying choosy supermarket chains but rather from its ability
to exploit a global market.
Aj Ticonel sells three million pounds of mini-vegetables and snow
peas for export to the United States, but only 80,000 pounds to
supermarkets. Alberto Monterroso said he gave up on growing broccoli
for La Fragua. He found the chain bought inconsistent amounts. "There
are a lot of competitors here," he said, "a lot of small
farmers trying to sell to them, so the prices are low."
The company's success has been built instead on sales of pricey
vegetables for export. It now sells the same to La Fragua, and its
membership has risen from 40 families in 1999 to 2,000 today.
Its plant sparkles. Its 53 packers wear gloves, face masks and
hairnets as they sort slender French beans on stainless steel tables.
Each box produce is marked with a bar code traceable to the family
that grew it.
Aj Ticonel sold $2.5 million worth of vegetables last year, but
Mr. Monterroso, a sociologist and deal maker with a passion for
justice, paid himself only $18,000. Most of the company's profits
are plowed back into the plant, marketing campaigns and agricultural
education for the farmers.
"I want a different country for my sons," Mr. Monterroso
said. "I'm trying to redistribute the wealth so people will
live in harmony."
One recent afternoon, a big Aj Ticonel truck took a meandering
path into the hilly countryside, stopping for peasants waiting roadside
with crates of vegetables to load.
Many of them grumbled that Aj Ticonel does not pay enough and rejects
too many of their vegetables, but most had been selling to the company
for years. The evidence of their profit could be seen in new roofs,
freshly painted homes and well-clothed children.
Still, Mr. Monterroso acknowledged how hard it will be to replicate
Aj Ticonel. Three times, the company loaned money to farmers to
clone itself. Three times the farmers went out of business.
For Latin America's millions of small farmers, he offered this
sobering fact of life: "The client buys from us not because
poor people produce it, but because it's a good product."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/28/international/americas/
28guatemala.html?ex=1105278541&ei=1&en=94f68f97f7417a07
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