Central America hands out cash to stall food crisis
By Brendan Kolbay
SANTA LUCIA LA REFORMA, Guatemala (Reuters) - Central American governments are handing out cash and fertilizers and buying up grains from farmers to prevent rising food prices from pushing millions into deeper hunger and poverty.
Guatemala, where one of every two children is already malnourished, is giving emergency money to thousands of women in the poorest areas to buy food for their families.
El Salvador is passing out hybrid corn seeds to increase production and Nicaragua is buying crops and selling them cheaply to consumers whose small incomes are stretched by rising prices.
Central America, torn by civil wars in the 1980s and still the poorest region of Latin America, hopes to avoid the type of violent protests over spiraling prices now plaguing nations from Cameroon to Bangladesh.
A combination of factors from high oil prices, to rising food demand in Asia, to the use of crops for biofuels and speculation on commodities futures markets have all pushed up the price of food staples around the world.
Rice prices have nearly tripled since the beginning of the year hitting net importers in Central America hard.
The region's governments -- members of a free trade deal with the United States -- have so far shied away from price caps imposed by other countries and instead are throwing money at the problem.
Guatemalan Vice President Rafael Espada handed cash to some of 2,200 women who lined up in the dusty town of Santa Lucia La Reforma last week as part of a $50 million government plan. Continued...






