Written in 2012, but never more relevant
We Are Now One Year Away From Global Riots, Complex Systems Theorists Say
10
September, 2012
What’s
the number one reason we riot? The plausible, justifiable motivations
of trampled-upon humanfolk to fight back are many—poverty,
oppression, disenfranchisement, etc—but the big one is more primal
than any of the above. It’s hunger, plain and simple. If there’s
a single factor that reliably sparks social unrest, it’s food
becoming too scarce or too expensive. So argues a group of complex
systems theorists in Cambridge, and it makes sense.
In a
2011 paper,
researchers at the Complex Systems Institute unveiled a model that
accurately explained why the waves of unrest that swept the world in
2008 and 2011 crashed when they did. The number one determinant was
soaring food prices. Their model identified a precise threshold for
global food prices that, if breached, would lead to worldwide unrest.
The MIT Technology
Review explains
how CSI’s model works: “The evidence comes from two sources. The
first is data gathered by the United Nations that plots the price of
food against time, the so-called food price index of the Food and
Agriculture Organisation of the UN. The second is the date of riots
around the world, whatever their cause.” Plot the data, and it
looks like this:
Pretty
simple. Black dots are the food prices, red lines are the riots. In
other words, whenever the UN’s food price index, which measures the
monthly change in the price of a basket of food commodities, climbs
above 210, the conditions ripen for social unrest around the
world. CSI doesn’t claim that any breach of 210
immediately leads to riots, obviously; just that the probability that
riots will erupt grows much greater. For billions of people around
the world, food comprises up to 80% of routine expenses (for
rich-world people like you and I, it’s like 15%). When prices jump,
people can’t afford anything else; or even food itself. And if you
can’t eat—or worse, your family can’t eat—you fight.
But
how accurate is the model? An anecdote the researchers outline in the
report offers us an idea. They write that “on December 13, 2010, we
submitted a government report analyzing the repercussions of the
global financial crises, and directly identifying the risk of social
unrest and political instability due to food prices.” Four days
later, Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire as an act of protest in
Tunisia. And we all know what
happened after that
.
Today,
the food price index is hovering around 213, where it has stayed for
months—just beyond the tip of the identified threshold. Low corn
yield in the U.S., the world’s most important producer, has helped
keep prices high.
“Recent
droughts in the mid-western United States threaten to cause global
catastrophe,” Yaneer Bar-Yam, one of the authors of the report,
recently told
Al Jazeera.
“When people are unable to feed themselves and their families,
widespread social disruption occurs. We are on the verge of another
crisis, the third in five years, and likely to be the worst yet,
capable of causing new food riots and turmoil on a par with the Arab
Spring.”
Yet
the cost of food hasn’t quite yet risen to the catastrophic levels
reached last year. Around the time of the riots cum-revolutions, we
saw the food price index soar through 220 points and even push 240.
This year, we’ve pretty consistently hovered in the 210-216
range—right along the cusp of danger. But CSI expects a
perilous trend in rising food prices to continue. Even before the
extreme weather scrambled food prices this year, their 2011 report
predicted that the next great breach would occur in August 2013, and
that the risk of more worldwide rioting would follow. So, if trends
hold, these complex systems theorists say we’re less than one year
and counting from a fireball of global unrest.
But
the reality is that such predictions are now all but impossible to
make. In a world well-warmed by climate change, unpredictable,
extreme weather events like thedrought
that has consumed 60% of the United States and
the record
heat that has killed its cattle are
now the norm. Just two years ago, heat waves in Russia crippled its
grain yield and dealt a devastating blow to global food markets—the
true, unheralded father of the Arab Spring was global warming, some
say.
And
it’s only going to get worse and worse and worse. Because of
climate change-exacerbated disasters like these, “the average price
of staple foods such as maize could more than double in the next 20
years compared with 2010 trend prices,” anew
report from Oxfam reveals.
That report details how the poor will be even more vulnerable to
climate change-induced food price shocks than previously thought.
After all, we’ve “loaded the climate dice,” as NASA’s James
Hansen likes to say, and the chances of such disasters rolling out
are greater than ever.
This
all goes to say that as long as climate change continues to
advance—it seems that nothing can stop that now—and we maintain a
global food system perennially subject to volatile price spikes
and exploitation
from speculators,
without reform, our world will be an increasingly restive one. Hunger
is coming, and so are the riots.
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