Proclamation 5873 --
World Food Day, 1988
By
the President of the
A
Proclamation
On
World Food Day, the
Some
estimates suggest that one third of the people of the developing nations lack
enough food to lead active working lives. That must change. Clearly, more needs
to be done. Permanent progress in this regard will not be achieved, however,
unless, along with remedial assistance, needy nations receive a transfusion of
incentive- and market-based ideas. The tide of freedom and democracy now
sweeping the globe offers the greatest long-term promise for success in the
fight against hunger and economic stagnation.
Finding
a lasting solution to world hunger requires agricultural and trade policies
with one irreplaceable ingredient: freedom. Freedom alone can build economic
progress, cooperation, and stability for nations at every level of development.
We need to move toward a time when government intervention no longer distorts
individuals' production and trade decisions. We also need thriving
international markets to which all farmers have broad access.
That
is something for all of us to remember this year especially, when World Food
Day focuses on rural youth. These young people often migrate to the cities. We
must develop policies that will encourage and enable them to remain in their
agricultural and rural communities and improve their families' food
productivity and income. Stabilization of developing countries' agricultural
base accompanied by structural reforms to increase farmers' earnings are
crucial steps in the drive to conquer hunger worldwide.
This
October 16 marks the eighth successive year in which people everywhere have observed
World Food Day. It is a day on which all Americans can resolve once again to
wage and win the battle against world hunger.
In
recognition of the desire and commitment of the American people to end world
hunger, the Congress, by Senate Joint Resolution 336, has designated October
16, 1988, as ``World Food Day'' and authorized and requested the President to
issue a proclamation in observance of that day.
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-eighth day of
September, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-eight, and of
the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office
of the Federal Register,