Directions: Analyse the given passage carefully!
Maize is Mexico’s lifeblood – the country’s history and identity are entwined with it. But this centuries-old relationship is now threatened by free trade. Laura Carlsen investigates the threat and profiles a growing activist movement.
On a mountain top in southern Mexico, Indian families gather. They chant and sprinkle cornmeal in consecration, praying for the success of their new crops, the unity of their communities, and the health of their families. In this village in Oaxaca, people eat corn tamales, sow maize plots and teach children to care for the plant. The cultural rhythms of this community, its labors, rituals, and celebrations will be defined – as they have been for millennia – by the lifecycle of corn. Indeed, if it weren’t for the domestication of teocintle (the ancestor of modern maize) 9,000 years ago mesoamerican civilization could never have developed. In the Mayan sacred book, the Popol Vuh, the gods create people out of cornmeal. The ‘people of corn’ flourished and built one of the most remarkable cultures in human history.
But in Mexico and Central America today maize has come under attack. As a result of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Mexico has been flooded with imported corn from north of the border in the US. The contamination of native varieties with genetically modified imported maize could have major consequences for Mexican Campesinos (farmers), for local biodiversity, and for the world’s genetic reserves.
A decade ago Mexican bureaucrats and business people had it all figured out. NAFTA would drive ‘uncompetitive’ maize farmers from the countryside to work in booming assembly factories across the country. Their standard of living would rise as the cost of providing services like electricity and water to scattered rural communities would fall. Best of all, cheap imported maize from the US – the world’s most efficient and most heavily subsidized producer – would be a benefit to Mexican consumers.
Unfortunately, it didn’t turn out that way. There weren’t quite enough of those factory jobs and the ones that did materialize continued to be along the US border, not further in Mexico. And despite a huge drop in the price farmers received for their corn, consumers often ended up paying more. The price of tortillas – the country’s staple food – rose nearly fivefold as the Government stopped domestic subsidies and giant agribusiness firms took over the market. Free trade defenders like Mexico’s former Under-Secretary of Agriculture Luis Tellez suggest: ‘It’s not that NAFTA failed, it’s just that reality didn’t turn out the way we planned it.’ Part of that reality was that the Government did nothing to help Campesinos in the supposed transition. Nor did NAFTA recognize inequalities or create compensation funds to help the victims of free trade – unlike what occurred with economic integration in the European Union.
Basically, Mexico adopted a sink-or-swim policy for small farmers, opening the floodgates to tons of imported US corn. Maize imports tripled under NAFTA and producer prices fell by half. The drop in income immediately hit the most vulnerable and poorest members of rural society. While more than a third of the corn grown by small farmers is used to feed their families, the rest is sold on local markets. Without this critical cash, rural living standards plunged.
Maize is at the heart of indigenous and Campesino identity. José Carrillo de la Cruz, a Huichol Indian from northern Jalisco, describes that relationship: ‘Corn is the force, the life and the strength of the Huichol. If there were a change, if someone from outside patented our corn, it would end our life and existence.’
The good news is that the free-trade threat to Mexico’s culture and food security has sparked a lively resistance. ‘In Defence of Corn’, a movement to protect local maize varieties, is not a membership organization but a series of forums and actions led by Campesinos themselves. It’s a direct challenge to both free trade and the dictums of corporate science.
The farmers’ tenacity and refusal to abandon the crop of their ancestors is impressive. But larger economic conditions continue to shape their lives. Rural poverty and hunger have soared under free trade – and placed a heavier burden on women left to work the land. The battle for food sovereignty continues. Movement leaders insist that the Government reassess its free trade policies and develop a real rural development program.
Questions 1-5: Do the following statements agree with the information given in the Reading Passage? Answer Yes, No or Not given. Note:
Yes: if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
No: if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
Not given: if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
Q.1. After NAFTA, a lot of corn from the USA has been sold in Mexico. _______
Q.2. Following NAFTA, Mexican business people tried to stop maize farmers from working in factories throughout the country. _______
Q.3. The Mexican farmers were paid a lot less for their corn after NAFTA. _______
Q.4. Many Mexican farmers wanted to leave Mexico after the Free Trade Agreement. _______
Q.5. The Mexican farmers were not able to do anything to help themselves after the Trade
Agreement. _______
Questions 6-10: Complete the summary below. Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in blanks 6-10 on your answer sheet.
For thousands of years, corn has been a very important (6) _______ in the Mexican culture. After the North American Free Trade Agreement, (7) _______ corn has been imported from the USA in very large amounts. Mexican business people hoped that this would mean that Mexican farmers had to get jobs in factories and that their (8) _______ would increase. Instead of this result, the farmers suffered from the low price of corn and people had to pay more for their corn. The farmers wish that the government had (9) _______ them during this time. As a result of the hardship, the farmers have organized themselves by forming a (10) _______.
Solution of 1:
After NAFTA, a lot of corn from the USA has been sold in Mexico. - Yes
Solution of 2:
Following NAFTA, Mexican business people tried to stop maize farmers from working in factories throughout the country. - Not Given
Solution of 3:
The Mexican farmers were paid a lot less for their corn after NAFTA. - Yes
Solution of 4:
Many Mexican farmers wanted to leave Mexico after the Free Trade Agreement. - Not Given
Solution of 5:
The Mexican farmers were not able to do anything to help themselves after the Trade Agreement. - No
Solutions of 6-10:
For thousands of years, corn has been a very important (6) (crop) in the Mexican culture. After the North American Free Trade Agreement, (7) (genetically modified) corn has been imported from the USA in very large amounts. Mexican business people hoped that this would mean that Mexican farmers had to get jobs in factories and that their (8) (standard of living) would increase. Instead of this result, the farmers suffered from the low price of corn and people had to pay more for their corn. The farmers wish that the government had (9) (helped) them during this time. As a result of the hardship, the farmers have organized themselves by forming a (10) (movement).
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