Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Globalization of Food: Good or Bad?

By Patrick Buono




workingcapitalreview.com
Globalization of food systems has come to be a cultural standard in many of the so-called “developed” nations. In particular, a majority of people in the United States continue to rely on a food system driven entirely by notions of efficiency and commodity. Currently, 70% of the food consumed in the U.S. comes from supermarkets, which are also fueled by this global supply chain (Swinnen 5). These global food systems, I believe, remove much of the identity that can be derived through food production and consumption. Not only that, but a sense of human interaction in food/cuisine is lost as well. Global foodways, however, can provide us with products that would otherwise be inaccessible due to sheer geographic distance.

            For this post, I will use coffee (without which this blog may have never been written) as a lens through which we can examine the good and bad of local food as well as global food. Although coffee is somewhat unique in that it is a bean that becomes a beverage, it requires careful planting, cultivation, harvesting, processing, shipping, and attentive preparation. In this way, it is akin to many farm produce items. It is also commonly consumed in a ritual manner, and is enjoyed in countless cultures across the globe for both its taste and stimulating effects.  Currently, two schools of thought exist in the coffee world:

1)   Coffee is a commodity and should be treated as such. (It is even listed on NASDAQ as one)

2)   Coffee is an extremely variable crop, and differences in region, washing methods, and etc. affect the way each cup of coffee comes out. The Specialty Coffee Association of America is dedicated to preserving this mantra.

Coffee Commodity Price, http://www.nasdaq.com/markets/coffee.aspx




I’d say that in this way, each of these opinions on coffee aligns metaphorically with the global versus local food mindsets. The former represents the philosophy that has driven globalization of food in general: “produce more, produce faster, sell for cheaper prices”, in layman’s terms. The latter places emphasis on human relationships between coffee growers, roasters, and coffee shops. Through the second view, coffee can be a way for people to interact with others and experience new things. 

In my experience, many American consumers, including myself, have come to expect the availability and accessibility of certain foods that wouldn’t be available without today’s immensely complex global foodways. Essentially, things like coffee, mangos, bananas, etc., would be the stuff of imagination to the typical New Englander if it weren’t for the speed of transportation and size of distribution networks that global foodways can provide. My emphasis on local food movements in the previous post shows my own affinity for quality local food, but without global foodways, I would never be able to enjoy the highest quality cup of coffee.

Coffee beans near the end of roasting, photo by Patrick Buono


            A powerful argument against globalization exists in the famous thesis of Mcdonaldization. Coined by George Ritzer, the idea explains that the globalization of McDonald’s has resulted in some homogenization of cultures (Ritzer vii). The immense standardization of processes and food offerings in each restaurant provides reliability and consistency, yes, but at the expense of a diluting of meaning and identity in the food served at these restaurants. “Big Coffee” operates in the same way. Their reliance on massive and automated farming operations and providing the same cup over and over to customers removes both a degree of quality as well as any sense of connection to the people involved in each step of the coffee process. 

A McDonald's In Russia, www.sachtimes.com

            Principally, I am outlining that global food (especially fast food mega-chains) remove much of the meaning that is tied to food. Removal of this meaning can also strip away identity that people derive from the cuisine that they choose to eat. This being said, though, global foodways simultaneously allow us to sample foods and ingredients from across the entire world, which is a wonderful opportunity that cannot be shortchanged.



Works Cited

Ritzer, George. The McDonaldization Thesis: Explorations and Extensions. London: SAGE Publications, 1998. Print.

Swinnen, Johan F. M. Global Supply Chains, Standards and the Poor: How the Globalization of Food Systems and Standards Affects Rural Development and Poverty. Wallingford, UK: CABI, 2007. Web. 4 Nov. 2015.

1 comment:

  1. I also agree that the debate between global food systems and local food is a very controversial, but interesting one. Often times global food systems are looked at in a very negative light, but as you mention, there are some highly beneficial things about it. For instance, products New Englanders would never have access to if we did not have food transported and delivered from across the world.

    As I read this, an example in our Burlington area came to mind when discussing our relationships to coffee. We often see this play out in local coffee shops, like Uncommon Ground, who favors the relationship we have to our coffee. Where as Starbucks is a large chain that is less focused on the relationship we have with it, but more as an everyday commodity. The two coffee shops both sell coffee, but are rooted with very different intentions on how we understand and interact with their products.

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