Technology, and Food Production, Distribution and Consumption: A Research Essay and Agenda For Budapest
Technology, and Food Production, Distribution and Consumption: A Research Essay and Agenda For Budapest
Technology, and Food Production, Distribution and Consumption: A Research Essay and Agenda For Budapest
Contents :
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This essay brings together three different research traditions: the historiography of agriculture,
that of food, and that of retailing, and connects them to yet another research theme, namely the
history of technology. These fields have undergone quite distinct developments, with the
agrarian historiography being the oldest and the retailing the newest one. That is to say that the
bibliographical references and the understanding of the former field exceed by far those of the
latter. We strongly believe in the integration of these research fields when it comes to the
explanation of the history of food (and of consumption in general and, hence, of capitalist
development since almost three centuries). Land tenure, soil characteristics, labour organisation,
climate or technical innovations affect directly the type and the quantity of produces. However,
retailers and consumers have always influenced production in many ways (consumers’
preferences, snob effects, retailers’ sales methods, advertisement et cetera), which makes it
impossible to consider agriculture, retailing and consumption as a separate matter. There is, in
other words, a dialectical and indeed very complex relationship between food production,
distribution, and consumption. How this complex relationship operates and to what views and
outcomes this has led and will lead, is a central concern of this essay.
Such integrated approach, that in principle makes no hierarchy between production, distribution
and consumption, has been spreading among food sociologists and food geographers.
Particularly the notion of “chains of provision” or “food systems” has been applied (Fine &
Leopold 1993; Atkins & Bowler 2001). So far, historians have hardly considered chains of food
provision. One, but crucial exception, though. Dutch historians have adapted the “chain of food
products” that includes primary production (agriculture), secondary production (agribusiness),
distribution (transport, packaging, wholesale and retail), food preparing (shopping, cooking and
serving), actual consumption (eating, conviviality, identification), and waste disposal. Each
phase is mirrored by a temporal-spatial step, namely the farm, the factory, the market, the
kitchen, the table and the garbage can (van Otterloo 2000; see also her paper). Such approach
has great merits with regard to the twentieth century when the so-called middle field is gaining
weight (lobby organisations, marketing, household and cooking schools, food regulation by the
state, medical counsellors et cetera). So far, however, these historians have directed their
attention primarily to this middle field and neglected production, consumption and their
relations.
Still, historians have not waited for theoretical insights to develop some kind of integrated view.
Suffice it to refer to the large literature on past hunger crises, where attention is paid to crop
failure, price increases, failing wholesale and retail trade, private and public relief initiatives,
nutritional information and cooking advice, shrivelling calorie intake, rising social inequality,
emigration, and sharply growing mortality (e.g. Rotberg & Rabb 1985). There are other
examples that indicate a direct link between food production, retailing and consumption. But
despite this, historians of agriculture, those of food retailing and of food consumption seem to
live in separate worlds with own journals, conferences, celebrities and bibliographical
references. This is linked to different traditions and epistemological developments. Most
agricultural historians have a background of economic history, devoting themselves to the study
of employment, yield ratios, productivity and output, price developments, market structure, land
tenure, technological innovation, labour and wages. Food historians have a very similar
background when they study the consumed quantities, price developments, institutions’ diets,
household spending on food, business histories, safety regulations and technological
innovations. The “culturalisation” of historiography, however, has taken many food historians
away from the economics toward matters of taste, preference, sociability, representation,
gender, identity, significance and other issues that became popular in the 1990s (Flandrin 1999).
Historians of retailing have largely followed the same path as the food historians. Often, they
started with the study of a big corporation (e.g. Wilson ‘s Unilever [1970]) or a spectacular
innovation such as the department store (e.g. Miller’s Bon Marché [1981]). The cultural turn is
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presently shifting the attention to the significance and perception of shopping, fashion, gender,
and especially to modernity. So, although these approaches do have common grounds, they
develop largely within own traditions and questions.
It takes a very broad outlook to tie together the land, the kitchen, the supermarket, medical
counselling, agribusiness, the table, health concerns and taste. Technology may be welcomed as
a common ground that brings together these time-spaces of the food chain. Indeed, technology
is very present in the (study of) production, distribution and consumption of food. With regard
to food production, the technology --broadly defined-- has had a central position since long.
Innovations in work organisation, crop rotation, tools, fertilisation and machines have been
studied when it comes to explain gains in productivity and output (e.g. van Zanden 1991).
Interest in technology has also developed within food and retailing historiography, with regard
to manufacturing and introduction of new produces, conservation, packaging, health, food
distrust, and grocers’ rationalisation and reorganisation (e.g. den Hartog 1995).
2. Risk Society, McDonaldisation and other huge questions about our food
Such emphasis on technology offers new insights. First, despite the fact that the technology of
food production, distribution and consumption has by now been studied at large, a lot of blank
spots remain. And second, the study of technology in relation to the chain of food provisioning
contributes to important huge, past and present societal issues. Two of these seem worthwhile to
be stressed. Food scares form part of the concept of a society of risks, with fears, doubts,
mistrust and uncertainties, which may be linked to neo-liberal, post-industrial developments
(Beck 1992). The role of technology is double, here. On the one hand, technology offers
possibilities to control the whole chain of food provisioning more than ever, and to reassure
consumers by boosting feelings of trust and security. Technological advancements have allowed
the improvement of such control in the course of time. But on the other hand, technology caused
and causes troubles by the ongoing exploitation of the world’s natural resources. And
especially, it offers the possibility for the genetic manipulation of plants, which contributes
highly to the already important distrust of food among an increasing number of people. They
(we!) have clear feelings of food alienation, which may lead to a loss of identity, doubtful social
relations, growing anxiety and augmenting tensions (Fischler 2001).
Pointing at such feelings leads to the second important phenomenon that links up with the first
one: the so-called McDonaldisation of social life, which is considered by sociologists as one of
the three trends that affect present-day food consumption (Germov & Williams 1999).
McDonaldisation is about ongoing rationalisation of the food chain, which has four interrelated
properties: calculability, efficiency, predictably, and control (Ritzer 1996). This concept is of
course based on techniques and organisations that are applied in fast food eating places, but it
may be extended to other fields such as education, leisure, retailing and (home) cooking.
Naturally, the history of McDonaldisation in these various fields needs to be studied. Again,
technology plays a central role with a double effect. On the one hand, it has a direct impact on
food prices, choice and availability (e.g. airlifting, packaging and retailing techniques that allow
the European consumer to buy affordable strawberries for Christmas). But on the other hand,
the four properties of McDonaldisation involve invariable taste, form and quality of the food,
cost-saving initiatives including low wages, displacement of workers, extreme exploitation of
the soil, atomisation of meal patterns, disruption of traditional social life et cetera (Germov &
Williams 1999). In both concepts (“risk society” and “McDonaldisation”) the history of
technology with regard to food production, distribution and consumption is of capital
importance.
The present essay is based on the workshop that was organised in Barcelona, March 2003. Our
main question to the participants was about the impact of technology on the food chain in
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economic, social and cultural terms, with special interest in tensions that came along with the
technology. To limit the scope of the meeting, we proposed to focus on particular topics,
although any selection implies the omitting of crucial issues. Six themes were picked because
they may fit readily into the broader theoretical concern of the ToE-project (i.e. linking and de-
linking of infrastructures; circulation of knowledge, circulation of artefacts):
- 1. Models of agricultural technological innovations: the ecological restriction
- 2 The technical formation of the agricultural labour force
- 3. The role of EC policies in technological innovations in agriculture
- 4. Industrial catering, fast food and their rejection
- 5. Hygiene and technological innovations in food preservation
- 6. Modern forms of food retailing
We wished to create a close connection between the historiography of food production, food
distribution and food consumption, with technology as the mortar (next, of course, to the fact
that these research fields form part of the chain of food provisioning). Agriculture historians
consider the consumers’ reactions and resistance (for example, Goodman & Redclift), while
food historians link the demands of consumers to changes in production (for example, Thoms).
Yet, it is not self-evident to assemble experts of identity construction through food and experts
of fertilisers. The workshop brought together historians, sociologists, natural scientists,
economists, geographers and engineers. This mixture turned out to be extremely fruitful with
lengthy discussions, rich arguments, and rewarding exchanges of views. A first outcome of the
workshop is the e-publication of five annotated bibliographies that deal with technology and
dairy products (Barbara Orland), fertilisers and in particular nitrogen (Vaclav Smil), industrial
catering (Ulrike Thoms), environment and biological innovations (Josep Pujol), and agricultural
education (Leen Van Molle). These are to be found at http://www.histech.nl/tensions/ (theme
“Agriculture and Food”, see “Publications”). A second outcome will be the publishing of a book
(see the Annex for the table of contents).
It seems useful to put the theme of the chain of food provisioning in a broader historical
perspective. In 18th -century pre-industrial Europe, Europeans ate what the fields around them
produced. Their food system and diet depended to a large extent upon the natural conditions of
the land, soil, rain and work, that is upon a physical environment little shaped yet by the hands
of men. This does not imply that European landscapes were not modified and transformed to a
certain extent, as Sereni proved when he described the Tuscan territory. Mountains were broken
into terraces and cultivated, irrigation systems were developed, and by the 18th century, new
non-originally European crops had been adopted (Sereni, 1974). But with the exception of the
wealthy people who could afford non-local foods, the European population had a diet mostly
based upon local production.
The 18th century Agricultural Revolution meant the development of agricultural techniques,
which had as a consequence rising yields. Not only new tools and machines emerged, but also
new organisational methods, property rights, practices and ideas about the land. The incentive to
develop, finance and adopting all these novelties, was the increasing population with a growing
number of mouths to be fed, but also rising urban rents. Middle classes and the rise of, what has
been called, a consumer society meant more abundantly supplied urban food markets, more
money devoted to food, and a more diversified diet.
This increasing demand for food put new pressure on agricultural production: even if now
external markets were increasingly able to supply European demand for food, local farmers
wanted of course take advantage and make a profit of it. And so they responded to the rising
demand for food. The farmers’ strategy was increasing investments, capitalisation of farming,
adoption of new techniques, diversification of produces, and increasing productivity. After two
centuries of capitalistic agriculture, as new techniques have developed (not only agricultural
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techniques, but also transportation, refrigeration, storage, and transformation techniques), the
relation between agriculture (production) and food (consumption) has completely changed.
Technology has allowed agriculture to overcome physical restrictions, and thus now we can eat
what it pleases us: cheap tomatoes and strawberries arrive to Central and Northern Europe every
day around the year.
New functions of food (for example, food as a medicine to cure sickness and prevent sickness to
develop) and changes in the taste (cf. Gavrilova) are replacing the plain, traditional ones (to
merely satisfy a physical need, to perform a ritual as part of being a member of a social group).
Thus, the ways we eat as well as the very nature of our food are changing. As a result of this
deeply changing diet, the demand for food is changing too. Given the increasing international
competition, this new demand is deeply conditioning agricultural practices and productive
systems (non-refined bread and sugar; replacement of red by white meats, transformation of the
greases market).
Until here, an argument can be made about the pre-industrial vs. the industrial connection
between agricultural production / technological development / food consumption. The less
technology is developed, the more food consumption depends upon agricultural production,
which in turns depends upon the ‘physical’ environment. On the contrary, the 20th century
industrial stage would be one of sophisticated agricultural production (and not only
technologies, but also rising rents and new foods) and ditto consumers, who to some extent
determine agricultural production. In other words, technology has changed the relationship
within the chain of food provisioning. It has made possible an inversion of the traditional terms.
Now consumers seem to determine the production, and production no longer determines
consumption.
This, of course, is a crucial matter. To what extent are recent changes in diet and food
consumption really induced and determined by the consumer? We know that by using a given
technological toolbox, food firms make choices that condition to a large extent agricultural
production. For instance, Ulrike Thoms shows in her chapter how the supply of potatoes was
heavily conditioned by the technological choices made by canteens and other mass consumers.
Furthermore, the rapidity with which agricultural producers are adapting themselves to these
new developments (ecological production, etc) is explained by the fact that, in a context of
increasing competition and “open” markets, European producers are not competitive via low
prices (Third-world producers are cheaper). Ecologically produced, traceable, safe controlled
food is more expensive than food imports, thus it is becoming the best possible strategy to
compete in the EU market. This is why import taxes over non-European food items are been
replaced by the demand of quality and health controls: their effect is the same.
The reaction against the type of standard, mass-production that industrial food production
entails is another consequence of increasingly industrialised international food markets. This
reaction is taking two forms. One is the re-valuation of the ‘traditional’ way of producing food
(i.e., non-industrial, home-made food). This includes the opening of artisan-like shops to make
cider, butter or jams “the old way” (the use of pre-industrial technologies, including the
restoration of old machines, tools and devices is an important mark), the running of farms where
hens are raised in open fields (vs. the chain-like industrial production). How food was
“traditionally” produced becomes the subject of a new narrative, as well as the target of food
policies trying to preserve these “traditions”. As Barbara Orland points out, “Discourses on old
and new (...) can be read as a communication strategy which attempt to fill the gap between
constant change in an industrialising world and the assumed character of unchanging and
invariant peasants traditions.”
The second form of this reaction is the definition of locally produced food as quality food. This
is entailing the return to old (“local”) breeds and seeds, the development of narratives about the
“regional” or “local” ways of cultivating the soil and breeding animals, as well as the reshaping
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of the industrial chains of distribution and marketing. “Farmers markets”, where farmers
themselves sell directly their production to the consumer, belong to this trend, which implies the
return to seasonality and the rejection of exotic food. Finally, it seems obvious that one of the
functions of these behaviours is to satisfy the need of wealthy consumers to distance themselves
from mass consumers. Those who can pay more want to buy different things, and the new way
to do it is this.
The “national” definition of technologies has also much to do with the uneven results of their
adoption. If every technology is inextricably linked with the place from which has developed,
this is much truer for agricultural technologies, which aim to modify the physical world: the
conditions of the soil, and the reproduction of plants and animals. 19th -century agricultural
technology developed mainly in England and Central Europe, and was rapidly marketed (in the
form of new tools, machines, breeds, seeds...) as the receipt for increasing yields. One century
later, the results of the a-critical adoption of these new techniques are devastating in regions
whose physical conditions greatly differ from the regions where these techniques were
originally developed. The papers by López-Gálvez, Salazar and Navarro on the one hand, and
Pujol on the other, show that the adoption of agricultural technologies developed in Northern
European countries had a very negative impact on Mediterranean agriculture, where water
scarcity and soil poverty demand a completely different technological set.
The questioning of intensive agricultural methods, high returns, high productivity, and
industrialised technologies that have characterised the last two centuries is taken in different
forms by Garrabou and Smil. The first is in favour of including the hidden costs of
environmental destruction in the final balance of these productivistic models. Does it make
sense to keep investing in technologies that have such a destructive impact on the environment?
Should we abandon the tendency to ever increasing the production? If Garrabou proposes to
produce less, Smil proposes to eat less as the best way to lower the unnecessarily high demand
for food, and thus the non-sustainable pressure on the environment.
It seems worthwhile to present very briefly each paper separately (although in some cases we
will repeat ourselves). They each show very distinct points of interest, a specific approach or a
particular conclusion. Furthermore, this survey of the papers will allow us to present an agenda
for further research.
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(political) role. They introduce a new project of social engineering, the so-called quality turn in
agriculture and food, or the repeasantisation.
Josep Pujol develops the very striking differences between the Atlantic and the Mediterranean
regions, stressing the divergent relative cost on the one hand, and environmental conditions on
the other since about 1820. He particularly wishes to emphasise the way in which technological
innovations have been introduced in relation to the environment in both regions. They were
developed in northern Europe under particular environmental conditions, and so their adoption
in the South has led to unexpected negative consequences (too intensive use of the scarce
resources). María del Carmen Navarro, José López-Gálvez and José Salazar develop this North
– South tension further, when concentrating on water supply in the greenhouse system and the
consequences of this system on the environment in present-day Southern Spain. Surely,
productivity rose manifold, but at the cost of high technological investments and damage to
nature (in terms of resources, pollution, and irreversible harm due to irrigation techniques).
They stress the urgent need of well-suited agricultural policy. Leen Van Molle deals with the
evolution of agricultural education and the spread of technological know-how. She presents a
broad chronology of this education, noting the different effect of a similar system in different
countries. She considers the sender (often, the state), the receiver (the farmers) and the message
(words, images, texts). She concluded that in most countries the outcome of the agricultural
education was a paradox: the rhetoric of the Heimat contrasted to the market-oriented intent.
Konstadinos Mattas and Efstratios Loizou show in their paper on the role of EU policies that
innovations (partly supported by the EU) may lead to new problems (pollution, soil
mistreatment, water supply problems). The aim of any agricultural policy should no longer be
the increase of productivity, but the care for healthy food, sustained development and
environment.
These papers, with an emphasis on the production part of the food system, address the question
of the measurement of the environmental cost, the chronology of innovation, the reaction of
farmers to education, the role of mediators, and the responsibility of the state in education, the
diffusion of technology and the environment. It appears that cultural elements need to be
incorporated into the explanation of how agriculture has been conceived by rural workers,
landowners, governments, lobbyists and consumers, and how, in turn, these cultural elements
have influenced points of view, strategies and policy.
Anneke van Otterloo fully addresses the cultural component in her paper that deals with fast
food as well as with slow food (surprisingly, a very uncommon duo in food studies). She uses
the notion of food chain, meal pattern, and distinct time-space rhythms in food trends in Europe.
She detects no spectacular moments of sudden change, but, rather, slowly evolving adaptations
to new techniques, new forms and new tastes since the late 19th century. Van Otterloo questions
the nature of slow food and fast food, linking this to a number of other twin oppositions (old –
new, Europe – America, good – bad,…). According to her research into the Dutch food chain,
this food chain has lengthened (i.e. more actors intervene), shows more differentiation and is
getting more condense. She opposes fast food (both in and out the home) to slow food (again,
both in and out), discerning a conflicting connection between the two. She concludes that fast
and slow food are part of one, global food system, opposing to each other, and developing in a
different time-space throughout Europe. Tension between the economy, technology and culture
appears also in Ulrike Thoms’s paper that deals with the industrialisation of catering (or canteen
food). She looks at the cooking technology for “the masses”, considering the factors time, cost,
scientific advice, endogenous elements (such as wars), the role of the state, profit maximisation,
and new technology (like freezing). Again, Europe offered (and offers) different developments
(an East – West division, DDR – DBR). She introduces the housewife, and shows the
importance of (different forms of) eating out (not just public canteens). Also, and importantly,
Thoms stresses the reciprocal influence between producers, scientists, the state, and consumers
(giving the nice example of “potato technology”).
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Barbara Orland directly links agriculture to food consumption and construction of national
identity. She considers the case of Switzerland (especially in the years 1880 – 1930),
investigating the way the milk market operated, how the image of the nation was built and how
and when new, sophisticated technology was applied. She explores the invention of a model
(and an image, in casu the “brown cow”), the way old modes of production changed under the
influence of new techniques, market-oriented thinking and nation building. Rayna Gavrilova
explores the influence of scientific and nutritional knowledge on taste and eating. She defines
taste (being a social construct that influences choices), and gives a survey of the nutritional
research. She then considers science’s points of interest related to food (energetic value,
composition, vitamins, and food-linked diseases as obesity). Finally, she investigates how this
knowledge affected the people’s minds as well as their everyday eating practice (with health
concerns and food scares). Particularly, Gavrilova studies how the scientific and medical
knowledge has been diffused by means of texts, education, and policy. Overall, four interrelated
phenomena may explain the growing importance of scientific knowledge for the general public:
the trust in rational knowledge, the importance of the individual person, the role of the state, and
the power of the bourgeoisie and middle-classes.
These papers, which emphasise more the distribution, manufacturing and catering part of the
food system, address the question of the role of kitchen technology (e.g. microwave) in the de-
structuring of meal patterns (and family life), the reversing links between retailing and
agriculture / manufacturing, and the role of technology and science in identity formation.
References to conflicts and tension in relation to technological development are abundant (water
and soil pollution, food quality and fears, global markets, North – South and East – West
tensions).
Many blank spots need further attention, such as the use of fertilisers throughout Europe, the
spread of fast food restaurants, the diffusion of agricultural know-how or the image of
agriculture and agricultural labour in past and present. Yet, several conclusions may be drawn.
The first one relates to a general observation: agriculture and food seem to offer a privileged
way of looking at the contradictory effects of technology in the twentieth century. The second is
the stressing of a paradox: the technological innovations responsible for the dramatic increase in
agricultural production in 20th -century Europe are now rejected. The third conclusion refers to
persisting (old, new and future) problems in European production, distribution, manufacturing
and consumption of food with the widening of markets. There will be at least three main
consequences of the 2005 EU enlargement. Food markets in the Western countries will have to
make room for the production of new members, and subsidies for agriculture and livestock in
the Western countries will be drastically reduced. Also, agriculture and food industries and
distribution in the eastern countries will have to adapt to the EU stricter health and
environmental requirements. Proper insight in these developments and problems require,
according to us, an historical dimension.
Soil pollution is one of the most serious environmental problems in Europe. Contaminants
deposited in the soil pollute ground waters through leaking, and vice versa, polluted waters
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affect soil quality. This has obvious consequences for agricultural production, food safety,
public health and the perception of food by consumers. The most direct source of water and soil
pollution is the chemical product that is used in excess and lost to the environment. Yet, these
agents of pollution were years ago the very sources of productivity increase. We will highlight
now one example of how technological innovations welcomed in the 20th century for their
positive impact on production and productivity have come to be radically rejected due to their
negative side effects on public health and the environment.
What Vaclav Smil terms “the 20th century most important agricultural revolution” was the
synthesis of ammonia, the simplest of all stable inorganic nitrogen compounds, in the years
around the Great War. It replaced traditional sources of nitrogen fertilisers (organic, such as
guano or manure, and inorganic, such as nitrates). Dutch agriculture was the most intensive pre-
1940 user of nitrogen fertilisers, with applications averaging above 40 kg N/ha during the late
1930s, and reaching 50-60 kg N/ha in parts of the country (the average US rate was less than 3
kg N/ha). By the early 1980s the Dutch application averaged 250 kg N/ha and was the highest in
the world. European usage of nitrogenous fertilisers remained above half of the world’s total. It
has gone from 1.8 Mt N in 1950, to 9.6 Mt N two decades later (in 1970), and it has peaked in
1988 at 15.98 Mt N. There are effects on food production. Europe’s intensive fertilisation (even
before ammonia) whose post-1950 costs were increasingly supported by rising agricultural
subsidies, was reflected in a steady growth of average crop yields. By 1900 wheat harvests were
around 2 t/ha in the UK, the Netherlands, Denmark and Germany. Due to other innovations,
Dutch, English and French wheat yields rose from 4.3 t/ha during the early 1960s to 7.3 t/ha two
decades later.
This leads to environmental and health damages. “The most acute problems with nitrogen
leaking from excessively fertilised agro-ecosystems is the leaching of highly soluble nitrates
into surface and ground waters” (Smil, ToE-paper). In 1991 the Council of the European
Communities issued its nitrate directive (91/676/EEC) that requires the member states to reduce
the nitrate load from the agricultural sector to acceptable levels. This pullback lowered the
average European applications to 99 kg N/ha by the year 2000, a nearly 20% from the 1988
peak. From 1988, usage has contracted by 28%, due to a more efficient use of the nutrient and
environmentally driven limits on its use. “about half of the applied fertiliser still does not get
taken up by growing crops, and only a part of this excess can be stored in long-lived soil organic
matter. The rest is lost to the environment. The price Europe pays for its surplus of food thus
goes beyond the staggering cost of irrationally high agricultural subsidies and the health effects
of changing diets. Environmental costs of excess food output are actually more worrisome as
many of these impacts would persevere even if the subsidies were to be miraculously cut.”
(Smil, ToE-paper). Also, there is a risk of over-production due to fall in the demand for food.
According to FAO’s food balance sheets, Europe has by far the highest per capita food
availability in the world. The EU mean was about 3,500 kcal/day in the year 2000, while actual
daily food requirements are rarely above 2,000 kcal/person (a gap of 1,000 kcal/day). Food
waste accounts for a large part of this gap which probably will led to reduce food consumption
(and thus, demand) in the near future. Changing diets, and the continent’s ageing population
will further this tendency.
The relation between agriculture and food is twofold, as stated above. Within the current system
of large agribusiness, agricultural production is totally dependant not on demand, but on the
conveniences and requirements of agribusiness, that have also changed cheap, standardised and
industrially processed food in mass consumption. This transformation has consigned agriculture
to a subordinate role in modern food systems, while it shifted control to oligopolistic
transnational food industry conglomerates and retail multiples.
We see alternatives to the usage of technology in the food chain, namely to use technological
innovations in a more efficient way. But a redefinition of efficiency is needed: it is not about
increasing yields and output, but about sustainability and creating wealth without risking the
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environment or public health. In order to survive, farmers must, to a large extent, turn their
backs to technology, or at least to certain types of technology. They must grow their crops
without old chemical friends such as pesticides and fertilisers, and replace them with old
traditional inputs such as manure. They must forget about genetically modified seeds or breeds.
They will be required, on the other hand, to produce under most strict hygienic and safety
norms, recycling their packaging,
A redefinition of the functions of the agricultural sector is currently taking place in Europe and
particularly debated in the European institutions. This has evolved from the exhaustion of the
50-year old model of EU Common Agricultural Policy, and the new challenges from both the
world food market and the European consumers’ demands.
EU agriculture employs less than 4 % of EU workers, but the sector absorbs almost half the EU
budget. The reason for this dramatic unbalance is the old political decision by EU member
states to finance the existence of an European agricultural sector, including a number of
agricultural units of currently six millions, only one million of which would survive without
subsidies. Heavy subsidies to agricultural production and to agricultural exports have also led to
other unsatisfactory unbalances: within Europe, a double burden for non-agricultural
population, both in terms of how their taxes are being used, and the prices they have to pay for
their food; outside Europe, the unfair competition with non EU agricultural producers, most
particularly the non-industrialised, and thus the damaging consequences for food world markets.
There is also the question of who has benefited from this agricultural policy: despite the general
claims, the main beneficiaries have been by far the largest producers, particularly the
multinational firms. Today, 80 % of total beneficiaries of CAP subsidies receive around 20 % of
the money, whilst 20 % of the beneficiaries receive the other 80%. This has led to serious social
and regional inequalities in the distribution of the subsidies. According to the Commission
(October 2002), half of all direct payments by ACP go to the largest beneficiaries in the more
productive and competitive areas, such as the Paris basin, Low Saxony and East Anglia, most of
which are export-led, multinational firms.
From January I, 2005 onward, the reformed new CAP foresees the dis-entailment of subsidies
from production: subsidies will be granted (and progressively reduced) to the agricultural unit,
and no longer in connection with (as a percentage of) output. This is intended to end with over
production and (what has been worst of all) with the fraud consisting in producing only to be
granted the subsidy, no matter whether a demand existed for the product, and regardless any
quality of environmental requirements.
We cannot say that hunger and malnutrition are not a problem for Europeans anymore, given the
growing numbers of poor people among the immigrant population, eldest citizens, particularly
women, and unemployed. Women and men collecting rejected meat or vegetables at night at the
garbage cans, backdoors of supermarkets, are a common vision in large cities, as people
queuing at the entrance of private and public charity institutions for a hot meal. Yet despite
these new (or rather old) hungry poor, European agricultural policy is not longer concerned by
food provision, but by increasingly sophisticated consumer’s demands, such as quality and
safety standards, traceability, protection of local denominations, environmental protection, and
animal welfare. These complex and new consumer’s demands are shaping in a wholly new way
agricultural production.
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This is not to say that the productive sector is in the hands of consumers. After a long century of
innovations in organisation, marketing and distribution, and increasing vertical integration of
firms in the food chain, favoured by CAP subsidies and policies, large agribusiness are able to
market in their benefit every type of ‘consumer demand’, and increasing their profits through it.
Not only that, but the high standards of quality and safety required by EU food legislation are
acting, in practice, as powerful trade barriers to imports from non EU (and non Western)
agricultural producers (and as such, defended by EU multinational firms).
Yet, even if agribusiness is profiting by the new changes in demands of food consumers, it is
not the only one in doing so. The new tendencies in food consumption include a strong flavour
of ‘back to the local’, a revalorisation of the local, non-industrial cultivation and food
production systems. Even if main suppliers of ecological and biologically produced food are
large firms, a small segment of small scale producers coexists with them, mainly distributing
through local fairs and markets, or through the farms themselves. Although their dimension is
very modest, their existence is significant of a new taste for non-mass, industrialised, food
production, and has also interesting political implications. The role played by cow breeding and
milk production in the Swiss process of nation building (see Orland’s paper) echoes the role
played by agriculture and food in the new regionalisms and nationalisms growing within the
EU. The construction (and then the defence) of local ‘traditions’ in soil cultivation, animal
breeding, and food producing and cooking, explains some of the latest developments in food
consumption.
Increasingly, almost unconsciously, the old functions of agriculture are being replaced by a new
vision of the rural regions should live upon, and what the rural population should devote
themselves to. I.e., to protect the environment and landscapes, to receive tourists (and sports
lovers, hunters and fishermen), to keep alive the old productive activities, our historical past,
our cultural heritage. Europeans are surely happier to pay for these social goods than for
overproduction of not demanded or too costly produced food items, only to be later destroyed to
keep a convenient price level. As a result of theses changes, what can be envisioned for the
future is a much smaller part of the European soil devoted to agricultural and cattle production
(and of this, most outside the intensively technological model today increasingly rejected),
together with a large part devoted to alternative, non agricultural production. This evolution
means that the close connection made at the beginning of these pages between agriculture and
food may be less close in a few decades. Not only the old ‘agricultural sector’ will be less and
less connected with food production, and increasingly centred in providing services or
alternative, non for food, products (such as wood). Part of our food may have no relation with
agriculture anymore! It may come from industries producing at their own laboratories. Is it too
shocking for Europeans to imagine ourselves buying our vitamins and proteins in the
parapharmacies, like Americans already do, instead that in our old markets? A perfectly dosified
and perfectly safe diet for the European of the Future? Let us simply say that this is, already,
technically possible.
The papers and the discussions of the Barcelona meeting, and our interpretation of these,
address a wide range of questions. Obviously, all of these questions cannot be dealt with, and a
selection must be made. This means making a choice, and therefore omitting relevant and
important issues. We propose to turn firmly to people not so much as consumers, but primarily
as producers, caters and cooks.
11
focus on one item (e.g. milk) or on one particular system (e.g. the fancy restaurant). We would
propose, however, a different approach to the food chain, by putting two factors together,
namely technology and labour. We propose to investigate how this pair interrelated with each
other, and how it acted along the chain of food provisioning from the land to the table. Hence,
the title of our proposal,
Paradoxically, the interest in labour is a result of the Barcelona meeting. As a matter of fact, we
have touched upon a great deal of topics, but labour remained out of the picture. True, the
education of farmers and farm workers, and the effects of globalisation upon the reallocation of
labour have been discussed. Yet, many, crucial aspects are left out, whereas we think that labour
–in the broadest sense—needs to be addressed urgently in relation to the food chain. Indeed, so
far labour has been rarely studied, with the exception of wages and the labour market of
agricultural workers (e.g. Sharpe 1999) or work conditions in fast food eating places (e.g.
Schlosser 2002). Yet, working time and conditions, wages and wage systems, skills and
education, diffusion of know-how, gender work division, land tenure, professionalism and
status, migrations, associations, industrial conflicts and strikes, economic crises, lobby groups,
et cetera need to be studied in direct relation to the food chain. They all form an integral part of
it. Workers may, for example, hinder technological innovation due to insufficient skill or by
opposing to the introduction of new work organisation, or union members may assault a
McDonald’s and shape a very specific anti-MacDo climate.
Our underlying concern refers to the conclusions of the Barcelona meeting, i.e. the increasing
control by retailers and the agribusiness of the chain of provisioning on the one hand, and the
double effect of technology (the good – bad antagonism) with ensuing contradictory effects and
images on the other. Where does labour fit in? Obviously, there was and is a direct and
dialectical relationship between technology and labour. More machines have “freed” labourers
from the work on the land, and more technology has modified the work in retailing and cooking.
We think this process has more than merely economic implications. Mechanisation,
rationalisation, control, and predictability (or McDonalidisation --see above) have also
entanglements with the social (gender division of labour, labour market, lobby groups,
impoverishment, migrations, work flexibility), the cultural (skills, education, mentalities and
expectations), and the political (ideology, the perception of agricultural workers, policy,
“McJobs”). We wish to focus our research on these social, cultural and political issues of labour
during the great changes that occurred in European production, distribution and manufacturing
of food since the 19th century. Economic issues (land ownership, prices, crops, outputs et cetera)
must and will be present. We propose to study more specifically migrations, the gender division
of labour, and the diffusion of know how. Questions that may come up are the shift from
agriculture to horticulture and agribusiness and the role of education, the image of the farm (as a
conservative or computer-guided enterprise), wages and migration, women’s farm work and
12
general gender relations, the impact of technological innovations on the gender division in
agriculture and food industries labour, or the search for professional status in restaurants’
kitchens.
We thus would propose to study migrations along the food chain in particular time-spaces (say,
capital towns of Europe and their hinterland between 1880 and 1940). This includes the study of
population movements from the countryside to the city (perhaps following food trade roads?),
the operating of the towns’ labour market (placement offices, wage differentials,
unemployment), and gender issues (with the questioning of the traditional view of the maid
from the countryside serving and cooking in urban bourgeois households). All this implies
attention to cultural phenomena, such as diffusion of food techniques (cutting of meat,
professional cooking), specific mentalities (countryside opposed to the sophisticated town), as
well as to political issues, such as control of supplies of public markets, the antagonism between
land and town (with regard to the hiding of food, for example).
Overall, our main concern is the link between the food provisioning on the one hand, and labour
on the other, with the assumption that technological issues that interrelate with labour, are
indeed central to the chains of food provisioning. It may be mentioned that this research
proposal is linked to a more general research interest, which appears through the organisation of
a session at the coming Economic History Conference (Helsinki 2006), "Gender, Technology
and the Labour Market" (organisers: Arwen Mohan and Carmen Sarasùa).
9. References
P. Atkins & I. Bowler, Food in society: economy, culture, geography, London, 2001.
U. Beck, Risk society. Towards a new modernity , London (Routledge) 1992.
B. Fine & E. Leopold, The world of consumption, Londen (Routeledge) 1991
C. Fischler, L’ Homnivore. Le goût, la cuisine et le corps, Paris (O. Jacob), 2001uper 2.
J.-L. Flandrin, “Préface”, in J.-L. Flandrin & J. Cobbi (eds), Tables d’hier, tables d’ailleurs.
Histoire et ethnologie du repas, Paris (O. Jacob) 1999, 17-36
J. Germov & L. Williams (eds), A sociology of food and nutrition. The social appetite, Oxford
(University Press), 1999.
A. den Hartog (ed), Food technology, science and marketing. The European diet in the
twentieth century, East Linton (Tuckwell Press) 1995.
M. B. Miller, The Bon Marché: bourgeois culture and the department store 1869 – 1920,
London (Allen & Unwin), 1981.
G. Ritzer, The McDonaldization of society, New York (Pine Forge Press), 19962 .
R. Rotberg & T.K. Rabb (eds), Hunger and history, Cambridge (University Press) 1985.
E. Schlosser, Fast food nation, London (Penguin Books), 2002.
E. Sereni, Storia del paesaggio agrario italiano, Milano, 1974
P. Sharpe, “The female labour market in English agriculture in the industrial agriculture:
expansion or contraction?”, Agricultural History Review, 47:3 (1999), 11-81.
C. Wilson, The history of Unilever: a study in economic growth and social change, London
(Cassell), 1970.
A. Van Otterloo, “Voeding in verandering” [Changing food], in J.W. Schot et al., Techniek in
Nederland in de 20ste eeuw, Zutphen (Walburg Pers), 2000, 237-247.
J.L. Van Zanden, “The first green revolution: the growth of production and productivity in
European agriculture, 1870 – 1914”, Economic History Review, 1991, 215 – 239.
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Annex : Contents of the book
OVERTURE
Chapter 1. Land, shops and kitchens: technology in the chain of food provisioning (Peter
Scholliers & Carmen Sarasúa)
Chapter 2. Conflict and environmental tension in the adoption of technological innovation in
agriculture (Ramón Garrabou)
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