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Abstract This article critiques the notion of food security through trade promoted by suprastate organizations like the U nited N ations F ood and A griculture O rganization, the W orld B ank, and the W orld T rade O rganization. We use and refine the food‐regime perspective to contest this unwritten rule of the neoliberal food regime. Rather than “mutual dependency” in food between “ N orth” and “ S outh,” as argued by P hilip M cMichael, however, we show that food dependency has been stronger on basic foods in developing countries, while advanced capitalist countries' dependency has been mostly on luxury foods. Also, the more that developing countries become dependent on food imports and exports, the more they will be importing the “world food price” for the relevant commodities. Food‐price inflation will more adversely affect their working classes, which spend larger shares of their household budgets on food. Our empirical focus is on food dependency in emerging nations— B razil, C hina, I ndia, M exico, and T urkey—in comparison with long‐standing agricultural exporting powerhouses, the U nited S tates and C anada. Using longitudinal data from FAOSTAT , we show that food security in the neoliberal food regime can best be characterized as “uneven and combined dependency.”
Otero et al. (Wed,) studied this question.