The history of the eradication of the Haitian Creole pig population in the 1980s is a classic parable of globalisation.
Haiti's small, black, Creole pigs were at the heart of the peasant economy. An extremely hearty breed, well adapted to Haiti's climate and conditions, they ate readily available waste products and could survive for three days without food.
Eighty to 85% of rural households raised pigs; they played a key role in maintaining the fertility of the soil and constituted the primary savings bank of the peasant population. Traditionally, a pig was sold to pay for emergencies and special occasions (funerals, marriages, baptisms, illnesses and, critically, to pay school fees and buy books for the children when school opened each year in October.)
In 1982, international [financial] agencies assured Haiti's peasants their pigs were sick and had to be killed (so that the illness would not spread to countries to the north). Promises were made that better pigs would replace the sick pigs.
With an efficiency not since seen among development projects, all of the Creole pigs were killed over a period of 13 months.
Two years later the new, better pigs came from Iowa [USA]. They were so much better that they required clean drinking water (unavailable to 80% of the Haitian population), imported feed (costing $90 a year when the per capita income was about $130), and special roofed pigpens.
Haitian peasants quickly dubbed them "prince a quatre pieds" (four-footed princes). Adding insult to injury, the meat did not taste as good. Needless to say, the repopulation program was a complete failure.
One observer of the process estimated that in monetary terms Haitian peasants lost US$600 million. There was a 30% drop in enrollment in rural schools, a dramatic decline in the protein consumption in rural Haiti, a devastating decapitalisation of the peasant economy and an incalculable negative impact on Haiti's soil and agricultural productivity. The Haitian peasantry has not recovered to this day.
Most of rural Haiti is still isolated from global markets, so for many peasants the extermination of the Creole pigs was their first experience of globalisation. The experience looms large in the collective memory.
Today, when the peasants are told that "economic reform" and privatisation will benefit them they are understandably wary. The state-owned enterprises are sick, we are told, and they must be privatised; the peasants shake their heads and remember the Creole pigs.
BY JEAN-BERTRAND ARISTIDE
[Abridged from Eyes of the Heart: Seeking a Path for the Poor in the Age of Globalization. Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted as president of Haiti by a military coup in 1991. After three years in exile after he agreed to a United States/IMF-directed "structural adjustment program" for Haiti, a US-led military force restored Aristide to power.]