**Video Added**Secretary Clinton's Remarks at the G-8 Summit Reception
Secretary
Clinton Hosts a Reception Celebrating the New Partnership to Advance
Food and Nutrition Security on the Occasion of the 2012 G-8 Summit
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Benjamin Franklin Room
Washington, DC
May 17, 2012
SECRETARY CLINTON:
Well, this is a very exciting time for all of us, which includes
everyone in this room who has been working together in order to realize
the dream of an effective, functioning partnership around food and
nutrition security. And to those of you who have traveled from afar to
be here in Washington, we welcome you. And in particular, we are honored
to have the heads of state and government who have been introduced.
These gentlemen are here because they understand the opportunity that is
being presented to have a true partnership, a global partnership around
the ending of food insecurity, hunger, and malnutrition. And we are
very impressed that you have taken this leadership position and the time
to be with us.
Also in this room are representatives of the G-8
nations. This G-8 effort began in Italy, and I see friends of mine from
the Government of Italy who began this process in L’Aquila. And at Camp
David this weekend, in partnership with our African partners, we take it
to the next level.
We are also pleased that so many of you who
understand the importance of public-private partnerships representing
the private sector are here as well. Because very honestly, we cannot
reach the ambitious goals we have set without involving the private
sector. And you’ll hear tomorrow about the exciting investments and
pledges that the private sector is making. We need your investment, your
expertise, your global reach, your commitment to results.
So we
are teed up and ready to go. We are so pleased that we have this
opportunity to present all the work that has gone into the presentation.
We’ll dive into the details tomorrow when USAID hosts the symposium,
but I want, in addition to thanking all of you who have contributed, to
thank my colleagues, the two former speakers. Dr. Raj Shah was working
at the Gates Foundation when first he left to come to work in the Obama
Administration at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. He began working
on this effort which we know as Feed the Future, and he became such a
valuable partner. And we were so pleased to see him become the director
of USAID. He lives and breathes food security, and we are happy to be on
the same trajectory with him to fulfill the goals we have set.
And
I also wish to thank my chief of staff and counselor, Cheryl Mills, for
the extraordinary work that she has done over the last three and a half
years, basically just pushing, pulling, dragging us all across the
finish line. Because if there were ever a cause worthy of our best
efforts and our enduring cooperation, it is this one. We know the
statistics: nearly a billion people worldwide suffer from chronic
hunger; 75 percent of poor people live in rural settings and depend on
agriculture for their livelihoods. So by improving agriculture, we can
together strike a powerful blow against both hunger and poverty.
And
that’s why food security is a priority of the Obama Administration. It
is both the smart thing to do and the right thing to do. It is a moral
imperative to help people escape hunger and poverty. It is an economic
imperative to spread prosperity, create rising incomes, give people the
chance to give their own children a better future. It is indeed a
strategic imperative. We want to support and build up countries who have
leaders like those here before you to take their rightful place of
leadership regionally and globally.
In the last three and a half
years, I’ve had the privilege of visiting farmers, agricultural
scientists, health and nutrition experts in a number of countries. And
there truly is a palpable sense of excitement that we are on our way; we
are poised for the kind of breakthroughs that we haven’t seen since the
Green Revolution. In fact, in several countries, we are already seeing
meaningful progress. Feed the Future is working with 19 target
countries, and during the past three years, those countries have
increased their total food production by about 6 percent, which is 70
percent higher than the increase in food production among least
developed countries. More food is available to more people, more farmers
are earning higher incomes, and the ripple effects of health and
prosperity are spreading despite the global economic slowdown.
And
we know that this is a very long dream for our country. As Cheryl said,
Ben Franklin, who’s up there watching over us, knew a lot about
farming. And he was someone who understood the connection between
providing for people and having stable political systems. And of course,
Thomas Jefferson was an actual farmer, and in the next room you can see
the desk at which Thomas Jefferson wrote portions of our Declaration of
Independence. He always believed that one of America’s great strengths
were our farmers and, in fact, in 1785 wrote in a letter to James
Madison, “The small landholders are the most precious part of a state.”
Well, we know from our own history smallholder farmers helped to build
America, and now we’re seeing it across the world.
So we welcome
all of you here as we begin this exciting two days in Washington. We’ve
provided you with a lot of food, so please don’t be shy about enjoying
it. But we do so out of that sense of gratitude that you are on this
journey with us. Our G-8 partners and friends, our African partners and
friends, our private sector, our health experts, our academics, our
agricultural experts, everyone – we are on a journey together. We’re
proud of what the United States did during the Green Revolution, but we
can’t keep looking toward the past and say that was great, look at what
we did 30, 40 years ago. We now have to take what we know and apply it
in the 21st century. We have to learn the lessons that we have learned,
sometimes hard lessons over the last years, and we have to focus on the
people, the people who will benefit, the people who will have their
lives changed, the people of nations that will change because of this
work.
So thank you all for your commitment to improving food and
nutrition security for women and men who will never know about this, who
will never know our names, but because of our work they will have their
own lives changed and their futures uplifted. And that is the greatest
reward of all. Thank you very, very much. (Applause.)