An era ends as China becomes an aid donor
Today's shipload of wheat given by Canada will be
the last received in the fast-growing economy, GEOFFREY YORK writes
By GEOFFREY YORK
Thursday, April 7, 2005 Page A3
BEIJING -- When a freighter docks in a southern Chinese port
today with more than 43,000 tonnes of donated Canadian wheat, it will mark the
end of an era in Canada's
relationship with China.
For 45 years, China has turned to Canadian wheat
to help alleviate hunger among its impoverished millions. But the shipment that
arrives in China today is
the final delivery of food aid from the World Food Program, the United Nations
agency that distributes food from Canada and other countries.
From now on, China
will be exclusively a donor of food aid, rather than a recipient. It symbolizes
a new era for the country and the end of Canada's official role in donating
food to what is now the world's fastest-growing economy.
China
will continue to purchase wheat from Canada on a commercial basis -- it
has become the biggest single customer of the Canadian Wheat Board -- but it is
increasingly buying higher-quality wheat to suit the tastes of its middle-class
consumers.
This single commodity has been crucial to Canada's relationship with Beijing for more than four decades. In 1959,
in the depths of a famine induced by its disastrous Great Leap Forward, China began negotiating a grain purchase from Canada. In
defiance of a U.S. trade
embargo, Canada started
sending wheat to China
in the early 1960s, helping to ease the widespread starvation that had killed
an estimated 30 million people.
"The vast majority of Chinese never knew that they were
getting Canadian wheat," said York
University professor Bernie Frolic, a
leading expert on Canada's
relations with China.
"A few Chinese officials did know, and they expressed their
gratitude."
One survivor of that era, Chi An,
remembers her shock when she discovered that her 4.5-kilogram allocation of
wheat flour had come from a hated capitalist country.
"The government had put the flour in locally made sacks
to disguise its origin, but the employees at the store whispered that it was
from Canada,"
she recalls in a published memoir.
Throughout the following decades, Canada
remained a top supplier of wheat to China, benefiting from the goodwill
it had gained by selling wheat during the famine.
"Undoubtedly, without the Canadian wheat even more
Chinese people would have died a miserable death by starvation," said
Charles Burton, a China
scholar at Brock University
in St. Catharines,
Ont.
"This gave Canada considerable advantage in
competing for Chinese wheat purchases in the years afterward."
In 1979, the World Food Program began giving food to
impoverished regions of China,
and Canada
became one of the biggest donors. Over the past 10 years, Canada has
provided almost 520,000 tonnes of wheat, worth about $190-million
.
The wheat has helped support food-for-work and
food-for-training projects, mostly in remote regions of central and western China.
Recipients get an average of three kilograms of wheat a day in exchange for
their work on rural infrastructure and other programs, including training in
health and AIDS awareness.
But this year, the WFP will stop sending food to China, and the
Chinese government will take over the poverty-alleviation programs with its own
resources. With its economy booming, China has become an aid donor. It
is providing technical assistance for poverty-alleviation programs in Cambodia and Myanmar.
It also recently gave $20-million in aid to the victims of
the tsunami disaster.
"It's the first time China
has responded quickly and directly to a UN emergency appeal," said Douglas
Broderick, the WFP representative in China.
Wheat, meanwhile, remains one of Canada's
top export items to China.
"It is emblematic of an outdated relationship with China," said Yuen Pau
Woo, vice-president and chief economist of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada.
"Despite the fact that China
has become a major importer of capital equipment, intermediate goods and
manufactured products, our exports to China continue to be dominated by
primary commodities. This mismatch explains, in part, Canada's persistently falling market share in China."