1st Edition

Food Supplies in the Aftermath of World War II

By Edith Hirsch Copyright 1993
    190 Pages
    by Routledge

    190 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1993. This study was written in 1946 having been commissioned by a large corporation in the food industry. The insights from this agricultural economics perspective even now are highly interesting. At the time there was real concern over food shortage and the UN and US government assumed there would be a problem for a long time to come. This study showed otherwise and set out suggestions for food policy and foreign aid policy with regards to food. This thorough study is an exemplary snapshot of the history of food policy and has lessons still to share.

    Foreword.  Highlights of the Study  1. Why the Food Emergency of 1945/46 Will Not Recur in 1946/7  2. Building the Food Crisis Into an International New Deal  3. The World's Food Supply  4. The World Demand for Food  5. Notes on Important Food Stuffs Other than Grain: Animals, Meat and the Problem of Maximum Prices  6. Recommended Policies.  Appendices.  Epilogue

    Biography

    Edith Hirsch was a commodities economist who ran a consulting group with her husband, Julius, in New York. She was a consultant to the Department of Agriculture in the 1940's and 1950's.