DAN GLICKMAN
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Dan Glickman

Dan Glickman served as the 26th United States Secretary of Agriculture, a post he held from 1995 until 2001. Previously he was a Democratic representative for Kansas in Congress for 18 years. Currently he is the president of the Motion Picture Association of America, which is comprised of the "big six" Hollywood studios. Glickman was born in Kansas in 1944 and began his career as a lawyer. He was one of the managers appointed by the House of Representatives in 1986 to conduct the impeachment proceedings against Harry E. Claiborne, a Nevada judge. Glickman has more recently served as director of the Institute of Politics at Harvard University.

Ideas recorded at the 2007 Aspen Ideas Festival on: 7/6/07
Interests
Most Recent Idea
The World
01/14/2008

Description: Glickman contends that many of the problems of the developing world need to be addressed at the fundamental level of agriculture, specifically creating a self-sustaining agricultural infrastructure.

Transcript: Agriculture is, frankly, one of the reasons why many of the developing nations of the world continue to kind of depend on handouts, because they do not have an agriculture infrastructure that allows them to be self sufficient in food production. And in the area of global trade, we really do not have very much free trade in agriculture, because it’s an interesting phenomenon. No matter how rich your country is, most farmers will want to protect what they have inside. This is true of America. It’s true of the UK. It’s true of Europe. It’s true of China. It’s true everywhere else. So agriculture is probably the reason why we cannot move very aggressively on a new global trade ground. The agricultural interests are pretty down on that.

Well I think in the area of agriculture, you know, what we as a nation have to do is to recognize vast areas of the world have subsistence agriculture, and our policies tend to hurt that because of the way we subsidize our products. I don’t want to make an overall statement because some are more in that area than others, and not every one of our programs is bad. But agriculture is unique. The politics of agriculture is unlike any in the rest of the world. You can be talking to the most liberal, progressive, politician in America, or Japan, or in Europe on anything else and you mention dairy, or cotton, or sugar, and it’s like they turn from Doctor Jekyll to Mr. Hyde. It’s just the way of the world and it’s probably always been that way. And part of it is the natural predilection to protect your farmers and your food supply.

Recorded on: 7/6/07

 

 

 

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