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by
Chris O'Brien
The
world's cup runneth over with living beer traditions. But
this vast repository of cultural brewing capital is under
attack by global corporations. The top five brewing
companies, all of which are American- or European-owned,
control 41 percent of the world market. Perversely,
economists and politicians calculate the conquest by
industrial breweries as economic growth while the value of
small-scale traditional brewing goes uncounted. Much will
be lost if this global "beerodiversity" is lost
to the forces of corporate-led homogenization.
The
globalization of beer not only destroys the social,
spiritual, and health-related benefits of small-scale home
beer production. It also undercuts the vital role that
home brewing plays in sustainable development throughout
the world. For 10,000 years, brewing has been conducted at
home, primarily by women, who were entrusted with
safeguarding traditions that strengthen social bonds and
build community identity. As an important component of
diet, beer was distributed by female household heads
according to the values of the community, which moderated
consumption to socially acceptable levels. As an
inherently small-scale and local endeavor, brewing also
has had a low impact on environmental resources, relying
on renewable energy sources and requiring little or no
packaging or shipping.
African
Traditions
Despite
the seemingly inexorable march of the global corporate
beer industry, many African brewing traditions persist in
the hands of rural women who brew at home. Throughout
Africa, most brewing and drinking still occurs in the
home, among family, and within the boundaries of community
standards. Four times more homebrew than
commercial-industrial brews is sold in Africa, which
doesn't even include the great volumes of homebrewed beer
consumed outside the cash economy. Women across
sub-Saharan Africa use native grains like sorghum, millet,
and teff, to brew drinks like rammoora, farsi,
changaa, tella, and countless other uniquely African
beer styles, often using homegrown and hand-malted brewing
grains and handpicked herbs and spices.
This
brewing provides a degree of economic empowerment to
millions of African women. A study conducted in Uganda and
Kenya found that 80 percent of the women included in the
survey brewed beer, and about half of them had brewed beer
for sale at some point in their lives. According to the
survey, very few men brewed, and virtually none of them
ever brewed beer for sale. Yet, men were found to account
for a majority of the consumption. In this way,
home-brewing beer accords women a degree of social and
economic influence, helping to maintain a peaceful balance
of power between the genders, providing women with a
source of income and respect within the household.
Unfortunately,
brewing traditions like these mostly go unnoticed and
undervalued by scholars, economists, and policymakers. The
little attention traditional drinks do attract tends to be
negative. The development community typically regards
traditional drinks as distasteful novelties at best and as
destructive distractions at worst. Aid workers in Kenya,
for example, have called for the prosecution of women who
brew changaa, for reasons of public health and
sanitation. Meanwhile, Kenya's main industrial brewing
company has become part-owned by Diageo, the world's
largest beer, wine, and spirits company, and SABMiller,
the world's third largest brewing concern.
Africans,
especially men, are fleeing the countryside in large
numbers, seeking opportunity in cities. Those who find
small success in the cash economy reach for a gleaming
bottle of industrial beer as a low-cost symbol of their
participation in the modern economy. Many more, though,
find grinding poverty in Africa's megalopolises. Even the
relatively inexpensive bottle of lager is out of reach for
the many who resort to cheaper, highly potent modern
versions of traditional drinks in desperate attempts to
escape urban misery. Scenes of pre-Prohibition America and
gin-soaked 18 th -century London are today being replayed
in urbanizing Africa. Hard drinking is on the increase,
while community and family disintegrate under the
pressures of globalization.
Such
scenes are found around the developing world. In South
America, chicha, a traditional corn-based beer
brewed by women, has become relatively scarce as
industrial beers produced by global brewing companies fill
the market created by the same urbanizing and
modernization pressures felt in Africa. Traditional rice
beers in Asia are only hanging on as western-owned brewing
corporations move into the market. China in particular is
at risk of losing its brewing traditions as foreign
companies such as InBev buy up local breweries,
temporarily making industrial beers cheaper and more
attractive than traditional beers.
Regulations
are necessary to prevent the predatory practices of
corporate brewers and to preserve the role that indigenous
brews play in sustainable development. Indeed, there is a
long and noble tradition of just such regulatory practices
that stretches back into the very origins of human
society.
Effervescent
Growth
The
Sumerians, circa 4,000 BCE, established the world's first
urban trading society by growing surpluses of barley and
emmer wheat, which they fermented into copious supplies of
beer for their own consumption as well as for trade with
neighbors. Sumerians, and their successors the
Babylonians, adopted policies to promote and regulate the
beer trade, such as the Code of Hammurabi, which dealt
specifically with matters regarding beer (and the
agriculture that made it possible), fixing a fair price
per unit, and setting daily rations for workers, civil
servants, and religious ministers. It was a recipe for
success. Sumer and Babylonia thrived for over three
millennia.
Egypt
followed suit, constructing a powerful civilization fueled
largely by promoting the growth of brewing and trading
beer. The pyramids were essentially vast beer storerooms,
symbolizing Egypt's power over its neighbors, with whom
they conducted large-scale trade in grains and beer.
Brewing, and its regulation, eventually spread north into
Europe where it became progressively more controlled and
regulated by church and state.
In
1516, the city of Ingolstadt issued the Reinheitsgebot, or
purity law, governing the production and sale of beer in
the Duchy of Bavaria. The law effectively excluded foreign
and small-scale domestic brewers by banning the
ingredients customarily used in their beers. This law was
finally repealed as the result of a 1987 European Court
ruling, by which time it had become the world's
longest-standing food regulation. During the intervening
half millennium, Germany became the world's premier
beer-producing country, in part because it had protected
domestic brewers from foreign competitors.
Beer
was similarly important to America's success. The
Pilgrims, who quickly adapted to locally available brewing
ingredients, eventually became heavily dependent on
British beer imports because their population grew faster
than their ability to produce adequate volumes of beer.
This colonial economic dependence became a key lever in
the war for independence. George Washington himself
devised strategies for the brewing industry to help loose
the yolk of Britain's economic enslavement.
Washington,
whose penchant for English-brewed porter beer is
well-documented, made the ultimate patriotic sacrifice
when he supported the non-consumption agreement, a bill
drafted by fellow patriot Samuel Adams (whose name now
graces the labels of America's leading craft beer). The
agreement encouraged the colonial population to abstain
from imported goods such as ale and encouraged the
consumption of American-brewed beer.
After
the Revolution, brewers carried banners in victory parades
proclaiming, "Home Brew'd Is Best." Washington
immediately set about crafting policies to stimulate local
brewing, exclaiming: "We have already been too long
subject to British Prejudices. I use no porter or cheese
in my family, but that which is made in America ..."
In 1789, James Madison designed one of the first bills
passed by the new House of Representatives to keep taxes
low on beer production in order to trigger local brewing.
Less than a hundred years later, in 1873, America could
boast 4,131 commercial breweries, plus countless private
home breweries.
The
Return of T'ej
While
both Europe and the United States currently support
thousands of microbrews, their domestically spawned global
beer corporations are destroying those same traditions in
other countries by dumping low-cost product on the market
and driving out local competitors. Fortunately, local and
national brewers in the Third World are fighting back.
Consider
the case of Ethiopian t'ej and tella. T'ej,
Ethiopia's national drink, mixes fermented honey with a
variety of herbs and sometimes fruits. Historically, t'ej
drinking was reserved exclusively for royalty, but
eventually it became a drink enjoyed by all on special
occasions. Female household heads brewed t'ej for
weddings, naming ceremonies, religious holidays, and other
celebrations. Tella is for common drinking, brewed
from locally grown grains and flavored with an indigenous
plant called gesho, which has been shown to have
medicinal benefits.
The
brewing of tella is still widespread, especially in
rural homes, where women earn a modest income from brewing
as an occasional trade. In the city though, industrial
beers have taken root. Although all five of the country's
industrial breweries have been government-owned, the
French brewing conglomerate BGI recently bought St. George
Brewery in Addis Ababa. Although beer judges rate its
product as by far the worst of Ethiopia's industrial
beers, it has nonetheless quickly come to dominate the
market due to inflated advertising budgets and
artificially low prices.
Partly
as a result of this marketing, many urban Ethiopians have
come to regard tella as hopelessly provincial.
Urbanites differentiate themselves from their poor rural
countrymen by choosing the bland foreign-owned,
factory-made beer over the homemade stuff. The fate of t'ej
has been even worse. T'ej is stronger than
industrial beer and much cheaper than imported spirits, so
it has slowly become the drink of choice for impoverished
men--the same refugees from the country-side who seek
economic opportunity in the city, but instead find
unemployment, loneliness, and despair. Nowadays, t'ej
is more often associated with excessive drinking sessions
in debauched t'ej halls than with royal ceremony.
Having lost much of its dignified luster, the quality of t'ej
has also plummeted. Processed sugar often replaces honey
as the source of fermentation, and chemical food colorings
are used to approximate the yellow glow that comes when
real honey is used.
This
degradation of t'ej inspired Ato Dereje, a recently
returned Ethiopian expatriate, to start a company called
Tizeta T'ej. Dereje believes that it is possible for t'ej
to retain what's left of its respectability and even to
regain an esteemed place within Ethiopian culture. His
approach is to maintain strict standards of 100 percent
honey formulations and to give the beverage an attractive
wine-like packaging, with labels indicating alcoholic
strength so that customers can choose lower alcohol
versions. Dereje holds that t'ej must exude a
sophisticated image, appealing to mature customers that
can still recall the days when the drink held a place of
honor at high occasions.
His
line of Tizeta T'ej is now marketed through grocery stores
and restaurants around Addis Ababa, marking the first real
attempt to bring t'ej into a modern economy where
it can compete against expensive imported wines and
liquors, while promoting a uniquely Ethiopian drinking
custom. His efforts thus far have proven successful, and
he is now looking forward to the day when, just like
bottles of merlot, his t'ej is exported around the
world to connoisseurs of excellent, regionally distinctive
drinks. As a locally-owned business using locally-produced
ingredients for a traditional drink, Tizeta T'ej serves as
a model of how indigenous brewing traditions can serve as
both cultural and economic capital.
Dereje's
early success can be attributed at least in part to the
fact that Ethiopia has been late to adopt policies that
open its markets to foreign imports, ownership, and
investments. Other African countries, which succumbed to
the pressure of multilateral financing institutions and
neoliberal trade policies, have not fared as well. Burkina
Faso, where the locally brewed sorghum beer, rammoora,
is forced to compete against a corporate monopoly created
when the country's only industrial brewery was virtually
given away to the same French company that now has a
foothold in Ethiopia's brewing sector. Industrial beer can
now be found in any corner shop in Ouagadougou, while rammoora
brewers, lacking an infrastructure of support, are
literally relegated to back alleys.
Brewing
Solutions
As
Herman Daly wrote in the September 2006 issue of Orion
magazine, "Globalization serves not community among
nations, but corporate individualism on a global
scale." So how might we protect local, traditional
beers from "globeerization?" Daly contends we
need "a new protectionism that protects us not from
efficient competitors but from destructive,
standards-lowering competition." Emerging economies
should utilize tariffs to counter-balance unfair
advantages gained by countries that externalize social and
environmental costs and rely on heavily subsidized
agriculture and artificially low fossil-fuel energy costs.
Government-backed
export investment and foreign credit, and huge
agricultural subsidies, continue to help American and
European multinational brewers enter and dominate
developing markets. Industrial products compete for market
share against traditional, indigenous beers that, when
gone, will have taken important cultural capital with
them. Domestic policies that favor small-scale, local
production, just like the ones that now support the
American craft-brewing renaissance, must be applied to
foreign policy as well. Policies that burden small brewers
with regulations must be reduced or removed, while tax
incentives and public giveaways to industrial brewers are
halted. Proven strategies can be used for promoting small
business, such as low-interest loans and other community
investments tools. Small-scale technology and structures
must be prioritized in order to benefit the greatest
number of domestic brewers, while subsidies favoring
large-scale production and distribution should be
eliminated.
What
we stand to lose is more than just a tantalizing array of
exotic beers. As is usually the case, women stand to
suffer the most, since they will lose control over
drinking when industrial products owned by foreign
corporations replace their homebrews. If traditional
drinks disappear around the world, the societies that
produce them will lose a part of their identity as well as
the intellectual property that can serve as a wellspring
for future economic growth.
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Chris
O'Brien combines two favorite things: drinking beer and
saving the world. He is author of the new book Fermenting
Revolution: How
to Drink Beer and Save the World, and serves as
director of the Responsible Purchasing Network at the
Center for a New American Dream.
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