I guess I should have asked what will the leading governments of the world do about the situation, and will they make it worse or better? Our government at the moment seems not at all concerned about it. They can't or won't pass a farmbill. Just today in the mail I got a flyer from the NRCS(Natural Resources and Conservation Service) urging me to take more land out of production permanently for wildlife habitat and to control erosion along the river. Now they want the most productive land we have. The way the system is set up, people who want land just as a retreat or for hunting can buy it, put it in these programs, and do better than if they rented it to a farmer. I am quite concerned about this program on a personal level as it affects almost every field I farm. In a nutshell, while the world stews about food shortages, our taxpayers are paying non-farmers to take land out of production forever. In the CRP program, generally it was land that should have never been broken out to begin with, but in some of these wildlife and water quality programs, it is the most prime and productive land on the farm.
Another issue in the USA is the number of people building on 7-10 acre sites. One house on that, not many. The area around Kansas City use to be pretty good farmland, lots of dairies, now it is hard to tell where you are as the towns have all pretty much merged, with a few guys stubbornly continuing to farm amongst all the houses. I am the first to defend our nation when someone else criticizes it, but we do have our fair share of stupid people, and short sighted politicians. I can't see at the moment anyone over here talking about doing anything to produce more food, if anything it seems just the opposite.
My concern is not that I will go hungry, that is very unlikely. My concern is in trying to fix this, will politicians make things worse? Our consumers are being squeezed from all sides, high food, high gasoline and heating oil. When people are up against the wall financially, almost always bad things happen. There must be a happy medium somewhere between decent prices for commodities and people not able to feed themselves, or afford to heat their homes. I wonder if anyone in any government can figure it out.