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First, we needed a 4x4 of some sort, along with a driver willing to chance roads that are sometimes passable, sometimes not. The man we found struck us as the quietly skeptical sort, but after a few hundred rutted kilometers, any hesitations he'd been suppressing hardened into emphatic certainties. “The only people who drive on this road,” he told our photographer and me, via our translator, “are people who want to kill their cars.” Yet he gamely pushed ever deeper into Madagascar's tropical north, until our mud road descended a hill and was swallowed by a wide river. It was the end of the line for the driver. He seemed relieved.


Somewhere on the other side of that water, dozens of farmers would soon converge upon a regional vanilla market in the village of Tanambao Betsivakiny. Growers would negotiate with buyers working on behalf of exporters and international flavoring companies, and together everyone would hash out a collective, per-kilogram price for the crop. Most buyers would pay cash on the spot, and the farmers would hand over several tons of green, freshly harvested vanilla beans.


Those humble beans, whose essence is associated with all that's bland and unexciting, have somehow metamorphosed, butterfly-style, into the most flamboyantly mercurial commodity on the planet. In the past two decades, cured vanilla beans have been known to fetch almost $600 per kilogram one week, then $20 or so the next. Northeastern Madagascar is the world's largest producer of natural vanilla, so every boom and every bust slams this region like a tropical storm. When prices peak, cash floods the villages. When prices fall, it drains away.


Madagascar was largely integrated into global trade centuries ago. The island is bigger than France, with cultural traditions that vary by region, unique biological treasures, and a developing tourism economy. The capital, Antananarivo, is full of laborers, lawyers, bureaucrats, bankers, artists, entrepreneurs, intellectuals—everything a 21st century city of 1.5 million needs. Yet Madagascar is also one of the poorest countries on the planet. You see and feel its disparities most sharply in its more remote pockets, including in the vanilla-growing region of the northeast. The extreme isolation of those communities, their dominance over the international supply, the dramatic changes they undergo during price swings—all of it has turned this part of the country into a semicontained observation lab that exposes both the genius and the insanity of globalized commerce. Visiting one of the seasonal auctions where vanilla enters the global marketplace seems a logical first step to try to understand it all.


So we really needed to cross that river.


The water didn't look too deep; we spotted people wading out toward the other side, carrying baskets on their heads. We took off our shoes, rolled up our pants, and stepped in. The riverbed was lined with fiendishly slippery, cannonball-size boulders. We plotted a slow, wobbly course to the other side. on the far bank, someone told us the market was still a two-hour trek away.



The road on the way to Tanambao Betsivakiny, site of one of Madagascar’s many regional vanilla markets.




It was mostly uphill, naturally. When the spiraling dirt road plateaued, we found ourselves on the weedy edge of a village. A couple of young men with motorbikes accepted the equivalent of a couple of dollars for rides to shave a good half-hour off the trek.


If our arrival was accompanied by a whiff of self-congratulation, it dissipated as soon as we saw the farmers. Most had been walking far longer than we had, in flip-flops, with huge sacks of beans hanging from sticks balanced across their shoulders. Some of the bags weighed more than 40 kilograms. And for the farmers, this was the easy part. They'd spent months in the fields, closely monitoring their vines for any sign of a bloom. When they found a vanilla orchid in flower, they rushed to hand-pollinate it. Each flower's fertilization period lasts only a few hours each season; if they missed that window, the plant wouldn't produce beans. Then, as the beans matured on the vine, the farmers hand-stamped the pods with a personalized, Braille-like marking (the horticultural equivalent of a cattle brand), so thieves would have difficulty passing them off as their own if they tried to sell them. The farmers slept in the fields at night, machetes by their sides, guarding their plants through rain, heat, and the buzz of malarial mosquitoes. For many of them, an entire year's income depended on this auction.



Farmers present their harvests. Many of these men carried their beans to the market on foot.



It would take place in a simple wood-slat structure about three times longer than the village's typical single-family residence. For most of the year the building was the local schoolhouse. The furnishings consisted of a table, scattered chairs, and a rectangular chalkboard. Outside, hanging under the eaves, was a portable hook scale.


One at a time, the farmers entered the hut and emptied their bags of beans onto the floor. Government-authorized inspectors sifted through the beans, making sure they were all suitably large and ripe. They rebagged the beans and clipped the sacks to the scale outside, then logged the weight of each farmer's harvest in a ledger.


In the dirt yard outside the hut, several dozen men stood in tight circles, watching the weigh-in. They were the buyers, or collectors, as they're called here. Most had arrived that morning, using rafts to get their motorcycles across the river we'd forded.


The regional markets follow an established protocol, the men explained. After the weigh-ins, the farmers gather together and come up with a per-kilo asking price, then write that figure on the chalkboard. The collectors stare at the number for a while, then huddle up. They rub out the farmers' price and scribble a counteroffer. This back-and-forth is repeated until the figures match. When that happens, the buyers divvy up the beans, collecting however many tons each has agreed to buy. The process can take a day or a week. If this one stretched into tomorrow, most of the farmers and collectors planned to search for a friendly villager with a little extra floor space where they might curl up and sleep.


The year before, at a market much like this, one collector had gone rogue, forgoing the chalkboard system and negotiating directly with a village chief behind closed doors. When news of the man's attempt to sidestep the protocol spread to the other collectors, he was chased through the village, apprehended, and jailed.


This particular sale featured no spectacular foot chases or citizen's arrests. But it had plenty of unexpected intrigue and deception. The business is cruel, humane, comic, tragic, ingenious, and flat-out insane, often at the same time. As we struggled to untangle the drama playing out, we began to suspect that our original goal—to try to understand the vanilla trade—should be secondary. It seemed more important to simply observe this whole business in a particular way: with a sustained appreciation for how incredibly wild global trade, at its most elemental level, actually is.


Vanilla orchids are native to Mexico, and for a few hundred years after the Spaniards first brought the flowers back to Europe, no one could get the beans to grow anywhere else. In 1836 a Belgian horticulturalist figured out why: They emerge from the flower only after it's pollinated by one of two rare species of bees native to Mesoamerica. Five years after that discovery, a young slave named Edmond Albius from the island of Réunion (then called Bourbon) realized he could hand-pollinate the orchids by carefully manipulating the male and female parts of the plant. His ingenuity transformed vanilla into a cultivatable crop, and small plantations began popping up all over the world. The orchids seemed to grow especially well in Madagascar, 500 miles due west of Réunion in the Indian Ocean.


Vanilla, in its essence, is an adventure story.


For the next 150 years, vanilla played it straight, drawing little attention to itself. By the 1980s, Madagascar was producing about 30% of the world's supply. Government controls kept prices tethered pretty tightly, to around $50 or $60 per kilo for cured beans. “You had some fluctuations, maybe $10 up or down, but it was pretty stable,” says Craig Nielsen, co-owner of Nielsen-Massey Vanillas Inc., a flavor company based in Illinois and the Netherlands that's dealt in the beans since 1907. “Then, under pressure from the World Bank, which they owed a lot of money to, Madagascar was forced to abandon those price controls in the mid-1990s.”






That's when vanilla started to shed its inhibitions. Prices dipped for a year or two. Then, in 2000, a powerful cyclone flattened the northeastern part of the country. It takes three years for a newly planted orchid to produce beans, so harvests waned for the next few years, causing prices to spike, then collapse. International buyers reported that local exporters were asking about $600 a kilo for cured vanilla on a Monday and roughly $20 by that Friday. Warehouses were stuck with beans they couldn't sell for anything close to what they'd paid for them, and a couple of the biggest, most well-established vanilla dealers in the country went out of business.


For the past four years, prices have been riding high again, flirting with the $600 mark in 2018 and rarely falling below $400 since. (The going rate this fall was about $420 per kilo.) The spike is sometimes attributed to a 2015 announcement by Nestlé SA that the company would use only all-natural vanilla in its products instead of imitation flavoring. Other companies followed suit. The true impact of the decision is a matter of debate. In the past year, consumers have sued numerous food and beverage companies, Nestlé among them, claiming that some if not most of their vanilla flavoring still comes from sources other than beans. Spencer Sheehan, a New York attorney who's filed suits against more than 25 companies, contends that the flavor is often derived from the “other natural flavors” generically cited in the ingredients lists of various products. The plaintiffs are seeking monetary damages, but none of the suits has yet received class-action status from a judge. Regardless of the validity of those suits, few in the industry say demand for natural vanilla has changed enough to protect prices from another dip. Almost everyone thinks a significant price plunge is a matter of when, not if.


Because northeastern Madagascar is so impoverished when vanilla prices aren't high, banks and other financial institutions don't open a branch near many villages. Farmers are more likely to bury cash under their houses than to put it into an account. The market demands that drive the exaggerated price swings are wholly separate from their lives; almost no one here actually uses vanilla, which is viewed as a product only foreigners consume. The impermanence of cash flow, along with the near-complete disconnect from forces moving the market, means the farmers view international commerce from a much different angle than outsiders might. “Consequently, money in northeastern Madagascar is not perceived as a straightforward, interest-based sum accumulating over time in an orderly fashion,” according to a study published last year in American Ethnologist, the journal of the American Ethnological Society. Annah Zhu, the author of the report, wrote that money in the vanilla-growing region is instead treated as a “volatile material that comes and goes, imbuing the region with fantastical undertones of alternating abundance and dearth.”




That sporadic abundance has generated a new genre of local storytelling, almost folkloric in nature, that catalogs local examples of financial decadence. It's called vola mofana—roughly translated as “hot money” spending—and the tales that illustrate the concept are difficult to verify but easy to repeat.


It's said that one vanilla farmer was observed buying the entire supply of mangoes from a roadside stand; he paid the vendor 10 times the asking price, then joyfully smashed every piece of fruit on the road. People say chameleons have been spotted skittering wild through villages with money glued to their backs. one vanilla farmer reputedly boiled all his money in a pot and ate the soggy, globular mass. We heard about farmers who had smoked cash, rolling tobacco in it as if the bills were cigarette papers. Zhu, in her journal article, reported that at a festival, a man stepped up to a carnival booth, bought a handful of rings to toss at a cluster of bottles, turned around, and threw every ring in the opposite direction. “This is how you play with money!” he yelled.


I wasn't sure whether to believe these stories or not. Most were said to have happened several years ago to people who've since faded into anonymity. And most of the farmers we met seemed frugal, intent on building wealth rather than squandering it. Yet almost everyone has a story like this to tell. Zhu acknowledges some might be more legend than fact, but their pervasiveness makes them meaningful. Her point in gathering and repeating the tales wasn't to dismiss the vanilla farmers and collectors as simpletons dazed by the sudden collision of the modern and the traditional. Vola mofana stories, she says, don't describe an awkward phase of Madagascar's economic development; rather, the profligacy they recount can be considered a “tactical weapon” deployed by residents against the “erratic, nonlinear development that characterizes globalization today.” By treating money so cavalierly—either literally or figuratively—the vanilla farmers diminish the power the modern economic order can exert upon them. Actions that seem to defy logic actually “reflect and often resist the magicalities inherent in modern forms.”


A translation: Maybe it's not the farmers and collectors who've gone off the rails when confronting the modern economic system; maybe what's crazy is the modern system.


Farmers are sometimes told that if they produce better beans, the market will reward them with higher prices. But that's not how it works.


If a crop is projected to be weak and scraggly, buyers get antsy, eager to secure whatever they can get, as soon as they can. The farmers try to satisfy the demand, picking beans earlier than they otherwise might, and the auction dates tend to slide forward. Sometimes an early black market emerges, with beans trading hands under the table before the official markets commence. Prices drive upward, and the beans—picked too soon, with less flavor than mature ones—often turn out to be even worse than predicted. When the crop is expected to be healthy, all of that is turned upside down. The farmers feel less pressure to pick their beans early; they allow the vanilla to mature on the flower and develop a richer flavor, and prices generally tend to stay lower. It's what market economists call a “perverse incentive.”


“The worst vanilla, by far, that I've ever seen in my life was the stuff that sold for $650 a kilo,” says Josephine Lochhead, president of Cook Flavoring Co., a family business in California that's been dealing in vanilla for more than a century. “And the farmers think, Gee, I've worked on these beans for six months, sleeping in the fields through rain, babying them, and this year's beans are much better than last year's beans—so shouldn't I get more money for them than for the terrible beans I grew last year?”


The way money moves, traveling from the accounts of billion-dollar corporations and into the hands of the farmers, also follows a logic of its own. Madagascar's largest currency denomination is the 20,000-ariary note, worth a little more than $5. It went into circulation in 2017, a year after vanilla prices shot toward the lofty heights where they yet remain. The previous year, when the 10,000-ariary bill was the biggest to be had, international buyers scrambled at harvest time to get their hands on all they could find. They rushed to the big banks in Antananarivo and bounced around the branches of the northeast, only to be turned away.


Lochhead was one of those buyers. She couldn't figure out what was going on until she saw local reps from McCormick & Co. arrive. The American spice giant had anticipated a price spike and acted faster than anyone else, she recalls, withdrawing ariary by the crateful from banks in the capital, then reinforcing its stash at smaller branches. “No one else could get any,” Lochhead recalls. “We couldn't buy vanilla for three days, until the government printed more money and sent it up here. It was crazy.”


Whenever the price of vanilla spikes and international executives are confronted by Madagascar's infrastructural precariousness, they ask themselves, Why are we subjecting ourselves to this? Wouldn't it be easier to get our vanilla from someplace else?





 Zidane in his family’s vanilla fields. He and his father pollinate their vanilla orchids by hand. After the beans appear, they’ll sleep in the fields to protect the crop from thieves.




New vanilla cultivation projects have been introduced nearly everywhere orchids naturally thrive. But vanilla is stubborn. It likes to grow among other plants, and if you try to create a huge, easily managed, monocultural plantation, certain fungal diseases tend to spread quickly. “We've started farms in Fiji, in Indonesia, and we have one in Papua New Guinea,” Lochhead says. Those farms have worked, to a certain extent. “They just don't work as well.” In the Netherlands, teams of horticulturalists embarked in 2012 on a pilot project to cultivate vanilla in greenhouses. Earlier this year they ran out of funding and concluded their crop wasn't financially sustainable.


Connoisseurs describe vanilla from Indonesia as earthy and smoky; from Uganda as chocolaty; from Tahiti as fruity and flowery; from Mexico as hinting of clover and nutmeg. But the Malagasy stuff tastes like what people expect from really good vanilla: rich, sweet, creamy. Those subtleties might help explain, to a fractional extent, why Madagascar dominates the trade.


A much bigger reason is cheap labor. Since Madagascar let the free market take over, the country's share of world vanilla production has risen to 80% or more, according to industry experts. The broader price swings are partly responsible for that growth. Vanilla beans are delicate and incredibly labor-intensive, and no part of the planting, pollinating, cultivating, and curing process has been mechanized. Each vanilla bean will be touched by human hands hundreds of times—perhaps thousands—before it's exported.


It's a perfect illustration of the globalized economy's heat-seeking, laser-guided ability to stretch a resource to the limit. For those arguing that globalization is unreasonable and exploitative, the vanilla farmers of Madagascar have become a problem to solve. Various nongovernmental organizations have introduced campaigns to raise wages, stamp out child labor, and direct more profits to the farmers and villages carrying the industry on their back. Many flavor companies have gotten on board, too, creating the Sustainable Vanilla Initiative.


When the beans are bringing in hundreds of dollars per kilo, many countries in desirable latitudes can afford to deploy that much labor. But what about when prices tank? Wages in the other vanilla-producing countries are 10 to 15 times higher than in Madagascar, where the legal minimum wage for agricultural workers is 18¢ an hour. In those other places, vanilla plantations would hemorrhage money during downturns. “No one will invest in that,” Lochhead says. “How can you compete with Madagascar, where people work for $1 a day?”


In northeastern Madagascar there's widespread suspicion that middlemen—the collectors and local exporters—are sponging up more than their fair share of the cash flowing into the region. This year, Lochhead devised a plan to try to work around them. She and a former vanilla farmer named Dylan Randriamihaja formed a cooperative consisting of 63 farmers from four villages. Throughout the growing season, Randriamihaja visited the farmers, monitoring their techniques, making sure they complied with organic standards, and checking the quality of the beans.


The plan was that after harvest, the co-op members would take their beans to one of the little regional markets. The collective, negotiated price would still apply to their crop, but Lochhead would pay a premium of about 2% above the going rate, and they'd direct all of their beans to her. Lochhead would get as many as 15 tons of beans she could trust were organic and of high quality; the farmers in turn would pocket more money from her than they'd get from a collector. What's more, Lochhead wouldn't have to pay any collectors a commission for negotiating the sale, and—because Randriamihaja had an exporting license—the two of them could ship the beans overseas themselves.


Lochhead and Randriamihaja sent an assistant to the market where the co-op farmers gathered—the same one, across the river and up in the hills, that we visited. He'd oversee the sale and haul the beans back to Sambava, the city closest to the remote vanilla markets and the capital of the international trade.


That was the plan, anyway. But the vanilla trade did what it often does to a well-thought-out plan: It wrecked it. Or, rather, a mysterious man in a red hat wrecked it.


While the collectors milled around the market, Marcel Sama walked among them, sweating under a fierce sun. He was the emissary sent to the market by Lochhead and Randriamihaja, and he called the members of their co-op together for a meeting behind the auction building, away from the others.


He explained to them that he expected the collective sale price at this market to be close to $55 per kilo for the raw, uncured beans. (Raw vanilla beans generally sell for about one-seventh or one-eighth of what cured ones do, partly because beans shrink during the curing process.) Some of the farmers grumbled; they'd been hoping for a little more. Sama let them talk out their frustrations until the meeting ended in smiles and backslaps.


The weigh-in was finishing up, and negotiations were about to commence. Two young men grabbed two packed rice sacks from the cargo racks of their motorbikes and hoisted the parcels onto a pile of bagged beans. They gently draped two jackets over the bags, as if to hide them, but everyone knew they were full of cash. The men told us they'd hauled the money to the market on behalf of Symrise AG, a multibillion-dollar German flavor and fragrance company, which buys more Madagascar vanilla than anyone else.




An inspector logs the farmers’ harvests.




Another collector, a man in a red baseball cap and an olive green jacket, lingered at the perimeters of the market, keeping a lower profile as the other buyers began to discuss their collective bid. Most of them agreed that a bid of about $55 per kilo was fair. Sama was happy to hear it. But then the man in the red hat piped up, saying he'd be willing to pay $62 per kilo.


Sama couldn't believe it. It was too much. If the bid held, the co-op would have to pay its farmers about $65 per kilo—20% more than Lochhead had paid for several tons of beans a few days earlier at another market. Some of the other collectors indicated they might be willing to go higher than $55, but this bid seemed excessive. And the unbendable custom of the market is that all beans must sell at the same price. The man in the red hat indicated that this wouldn't be a problem: He would buy the entire inventory at $62 per kilo, if the farmers agreed. Even the members of the co-op couldn't resist such an offer.


There was just one thing. The money, the man explained, was still in offices on the other side of the river. It would take him several hours to get all of it hauled out to the market hut. As it was already afternoon, he asked them to give him until the next morning, when he'd return with the cash, first thing. It was a deal. Some of the farmers spent that night sleeping next to their beans, to make sure nothing was stolen.


The next morning, all of the farmers reconvened. But the man in the red hat was nowhere to be found. Hours ticked by. He didn't return.


By the next day we had rejoined Lochhead and Randriamihaja in Sambava. Sama called them to say the false bid had thrown everything off. Negotiations had started anew. The farmers were now angry—and empowered. They'd observed some collectors seriously considering matching the bogus bid the day before, and their baseline asking price was no longer $55 per kilo. When a few collectors agreed to the $62, Lochhead and Randriamihaja bowed out. The cooperative farmers sold their beans to others.


“It's frustrating, because the farmers can say our co-op didn't offer them a good price,” Randriamihaja said. “But I think they will come back to us. We will try again.”


The man in the red hat had been a saboteur, he guessed. But who sent him? Rumors floated around the market that the man worked for an exporter that didn't want cooperatives limiting its access to beans. “I think he probably was sent by a big company, just to upset the market,” Randriamihaja speculated. “It has happened before, several times. They want to ruin our reputations.”


In 2019 about 400 companies were licensed to export vanilla from Madagascar, and many are small and relatively new. Randriamihaja, who got his license three years ago, is one of those up-and-comers. Some people, particularly the established exporting companies, argue that some of these inexperienced dealers are diluting Madagascar's market with low-quality, poorly cured beans. They support ongoing government initiatives to cut the number to as few as 40 licensees.


“They say it's for quality reasons, but that doesn't make sense to me,” Randriamihaja said. “Those big companies are handling 600 tons a year, so how can they control the quality of that? We do something like 15 tons a year. We can provide a good, quality bean, because we're controlling them every day, through every step of the process.”


Lochhead nodded in agreement. To her, the license reduction scheme felt like a power play. “It's a racket,” she said. “A big boys' club.”







She and Randriamihaja now needed another way to get vanilla beans. They spent the next two days going to villages in search of vrac, the term for beans that have been partially cured. Vrac can be stored for longer periods than raw beans, and some farmers like to deal in it because it can provide income in the months after the harvest. Inside a one-room hut of split bamboo, Lochhead and Randriamihaja found an 80-year-old man named Farlahy Gilbert. He looked as thin and wizened as the beans he spread out for them to inspect. Lochhead cast a critical eye on his supply. She lifted a couple of the oily beans to her nose. “Ooh,” she said, wincing. “There's mold. That's bad. Smell it.”


Gilbert fetched another batch and poured it out for them. “It looks pretty wet,” Lochhead said. She guessed it was about 40% moisture. Gourmet vanilla vrac should be 32% to 35%. “Tell him to get this out in the sun,” she told Randriamihaja.


Their next stop was a hut right across the road, where a 34-year-old farmer named Be Olivier lived. “Now this is workable,” Lochhead said, kneeling down in front of the vrac the farmer had spread out on a coffee table for inspection. Her flowing white dress pooled around her legs, and she closed her eyes as she inhaled the sweet, heavy scent. To her, this was the best part of her business: the direct, sensory pleasure when things went right. “This,” she said, pulling a moist brown pod from the pile, “is the perfect vanilla bean.” She admired it, smiling, for an extended moment. “How much does he have?” she asked.


Olivier told them he had plenty to sell, but he wouldn't say exactly how much. “They will never tell you that,” Randriamihaja said. They feared theft.


By any international standard, Olivier was living in poverty, without running water or reliable electricity. But high vanilla prices had allowed him to accumulate some enviable assets in recent years. He'd grown up in a hut made of palm thatch and moved to one of split bamboo; now his walls were made of solid wood planks. And unlike most of the village's huts, his had two rooms. Where once his floors were bare earth covered by rugs, now he walked on smooth, red-painted boards. The chairs in the living room had cushions on them. And he had a television, powered by a single solar panel balanced on the peak of his corrugated roof and connected to the village's only satellite dish.


When we asked Olivier to verify the spelling of his name, he motioned to his 7-year-old daughter, who'd been watching from a bed in the adjoining room. He'd recently enrolled her in school, and when she spelled out his name for us, he smiled with undisguised pride. She was mastering things he'd never thought possible for himself.




Dylan Randriamihaja, vanilla farmer turned exporter, and Josephine Lochhead, president of Cook Flavoring Co., inspect bundles of vrac.




Randriamihaja could relate. He grew up in a crowded hut with six sisters and three brothers, the children of vanilla growers. Tiny fingers were valuable when handling delicate flowers, and he worked the fields for years. His parents rarely collected cash for their beans; more often, they'd trade them to visiting Chinese and Indian merchants for items such as blankets and sugar. As the vanilla market opened up in the mid-1990s, Randriamihaja encountered more international buyers.


A combination of curiosity and ambition drew him toward them. Slowly, to complement the Malagasy and French he spoke, he taught himself to read, write, and speak English. He'd practice with the few tourists he met at the Orchidea Hotel in Sambava. A natural conversationalist unafraid of throwing himself into new experiences, he decided his future might lie in the tourism industry. He traveled to Antananarivo, completed courses there, and returned to start a business as a guide.


The work was inconsistent, mostly because only the most intrepid tourists made it to his corner of the country, and after a few years he decided to return to the business he'd grown up in. He started farming and curing his own vanilla beans, selling them to local exporters. Five years in, he got a call from the proprietor of the Orchidea Hotel. An American was in town, he was told. She was interested in vanilla, and she needed help.







It was 2015, and Lochhead was midway through her first visit to Madagascar. For years she'd been buying its vanilla from afar, but she wanted to immerse herself in a trade she'd also been born into, to experience it directly and connect herself to its source. Things weren't going well: She was battling stomach bugs, and the niece who'd accompanied her was holed up in the hotel, shivering through a bout of malaria. Lochhead had hoped to explore the possibility of dealing more directly with locals in purchasing her beans, but she was in no condition to explore anything. “I was kind of overwhelmed,” she remembered.


Randriamihaja met her at the hotel, and they jelled. He became more than just a guide to the local industry, getting his exporting license later that same year and turning into something more like a partner. He listened to her frustrations and searched for solutions. When she said she needed a more reliable source of certified organic vanilla, he organized the cooperative and trained its members to make sure they followed the certification standards. Although the cooperative ended up selling its beans to other buyers this year, both he and Lochhead viewed that disappointment as a learning experience.


Not too long ago, he took the leaders of the cooperative to a regional bank branch to show them how the banking system works. He opened an account for the group and, over the course of multiple visits, showed them how money could be electronically transferred from one account to another.


“They didn't trust it at first,” Randriamihaja said. “It was very hard to convince them. But after the leaders saw that the money really was in there, that it wasn't a trick, and that they could get the money anytime, they were OK with it. So this is how we will pay them from now on.”


Recently, Randriamihaja boarded a plane and flew beyond the shores of his island for the first time. He traveled all the way to the U.S. to visit Lochhead's vanilla production facility in Paso Robles, Calif.—his turn to plunge into an entirely foreign landscape. From Los Angeles, he made his way north. He came to the banks of the Santa Clara River, crossed it, and ventured back toward the coast. Everything was exotic: the five-lane freeways, the baseball stadiums, the wineries, the arrow-straight rows of asparagus and cabbage stretching to the horizon. It was the adventure of his life, and it changed him.


Now, back in Madagascar, he was overseeing a team that was curing several tons of beans Lochhead had recently bought. The workers spread the beans on drying racks in his yard. At the front of his house, outside a guard station, an American flag now flew beside the one from Madagascar. In his office a stereo played country and western music. Randriamihaja wore a T-shirt that, against an outline of a map of America, said, “This Is Chevy Country.”







It would be difficult to come up with a more on-the-nose illustration of how globalization colors all it touches. But in Randriamihaja's office, the colors blur and bleed into one another. Is the image of him—in that T-shirt, listening to that music, under that flag—an example of how local cultures get subsumed by more dominant ones? Or is it a reflection of how one man celebrates the connections that have permanently broadened his perspectives?


It's both things at once, sort of like the poster Randriamihaja displays on the wall behind his desk. It advertises a campaign by the International Labour Organization to stamp out child labor in the vanilla fields. He backs that program and the intentions behind it. But he admitted his perspective is blurred by mixed feelings.


“I guess they could say I was a victim of child labor,” he said. Was it exploitation or opportunity? You could make a strong argument either way, he said. “To me, I was just helping my parents.”

Above us, the clank of hammers threatened to drown out the country music coming from the stereo speakers. on the roof, workers were busy adding another story onto Randriamihaja's house.




Workers lay out beans at Madagascar Spices




https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2019-economics-of-vanilla-markets-madagascar/

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사람들에게 흙이 중요하다고 이야기하며 토양침식은 심각한 문제라고 말해도 잘 체감하지 못한다. 하지만 이걸 돈으로 환산해 이야기하면 그나마 조심해야겠단 생각은 하게 된다.

토양침식에 관한 새로운 연구에 의하면, 토양침식으로 발생하는 연간 경제적 손실이 80억 달러에 달한다. 한국인에게 말할 때에는 한화로 환산해서 이야기해야 한다. 무려 9조 2504억 원에 이른다.

한국도 토양침식에서 자유롭지 못하다는 건 조금만 농사나 흙에 관심이 있어도 쉽게 알 수 있다. 곳곳에서 폭우로 패여 있는 땅을 볼 수 있지 않은가. 실제로도 한국은 토양침식이 심한 곳으로 분류되고 있다.




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전통 쇼유 라멘



일본이 2차대전에서 항복했을 때 폐허가 되었다. 미국의 폭격으로 200만 채의 건물이 파괴되거나 부수어지며 굶주린 일본인들은 식량을 점점 암시장에 의존하게 되었다. 이러한 거대한 도시의 암시장에서 라멘은 일본 요리의 중요한 부분으로 떠올랐다.  

Japan Quarterly에 의하면 라멘은 중국 이민자들이 19세기 들어 일본에 처음으로 소개했는데, 원래는 중국식으로 구운 돼지고기를 얹은 국수였다. 1945년 12월, 일본은 42년 만에 최악의 벼 수확량을 기록했다. 조선(원문엔 중국인데, 중국은 일본의 식량생산기지의 역할을 한 적이 없기에 글쓴이의 오류라 생각하여 조선으로 고쳤음)과 타이완의 전시 식민지에서 발생한 농업 손실로 인해 쌀 생산량이 급감했다. 이는 일본의 쌀에 기반한 식문화에서 밀 국수가 중요해진 요인이었다.

전쟁에서 일본이 패전한 뒤, 미군은 1945-1952년까지 이곳을 점령했따. 식량난에 직면하여 미국인들은 엄청난 양의 밀을 일본으로 수입하기 시작했다. 1948-1951년까지 일본에서 빵 소비는 26만2121톤에서 61만1784톤으로 증가했다. 그런데 밀은 대부분의 일본인이 암거래 음식 노점상에게서 먹었던 라멘으로 흘러갔다. 일본에서 암시장은 전쟁통에 존재해 왔다. 그러나 전쟁의 마지막 몇 년 동안과 점령 기간 동안 점차 매우 중요해졌다. 정부의 식량배급 체계가 예정보다 20일 늦게 운영되면서 많은 사람들이 생존을 위해 암시장에 의존했다. 


도쿄 신바시의 암시장, 1946년


1945년 10월까지, 도쿄에는 약 4만5천 개의 암시장 매대가 존재했다고 추산된다. 또한 도쿄는일본에서 가장 유명한 암시장인 아메요코쵸Ameyokocho가 있는 곳이기도 했다. 도시 중심의 철로 아래에 위치한 이곳은 사탕부터 라멘과 옷까지 모든 걸 파는 노천의 진열대로 가득 찼다. 이런번잡한 환경에서 노점상은 특유의 차르멜라라는 피리 소리로 자신의 존재를 알리며, 국물과 물을 끓이는 냄비와 함께 국수가 담긴 서랍을 지닌 바퀴 달린 음식 카트인 야타이에서 라멘을 팔았다. 미국산 밀과 돼지기름이 풍부하여 가격도 저렴했다. 

그 당시, 점령 기간 동안 식당에서 음식을 사고파는 건 불법이었다. 이는 배급을 통제하려고 일본 정부가 전시에 시행하던 야외의 음식 노점 금지를 미국인들이 계속 유지했기 때문이다. 그래서 라멘을 만드는 밀가루는 제분업체에서부터  노점상에게서 보호비를 강탈하던 야쿠자가 길거리 매대의 약 90%를 통제하던 암시장으로 비밀리에 보내졌다. 점령 기간 동안 수천 명의 라멘 노점상이 체포되었다. 


상품을 몰수하는 경찰, 1949년.


하지만 1950년, 정부는 음식 노점상에 대한 규제를 완화하고 밀가루의 거래에 대한 통제를 없애기 시작했고, 이로 인해 라멘 노점의 수는 더욱 증가했다. 기업들은 국수와 고명, 그릇, 젓가락까지 갖추어진 야타이 완점품을 노점상에게 임대하기까지 했다.  

오늘날 팔리고 있는 수많은 종류의 라멘과 달리, 당시의 라면은 간단했다. 뉴욕 브루클린에 있는 오사카나Osakana에서 라멘 요리를 강습하는 Jonathan Garcia에 의하면, 이 시기에 라멘은 쇼유(간장)에 기반한 국물에 돼지고기, 닭고기, 니보시niboshi (말린 정어리)를 조합하여 만들었다.  양념을 하는 건 국물 냄비에 섞었고, 노점상은 하루종일 그걸 보충했다. 요즘 라멘은 국물을 붓기 전에 쇼유나 다른 재료와 함께 개별적으로 양념을 한다. 

지방과 강한 풍미가 풍부한 음식은 “보양식”으로 알려지게 되었다고 <라멘에 대한 알려지지 않은 역사(Untold History of Ramen)>의 저자인 교수 George Solt 씨는 말한다. 라멘은 전통적인 일본 요리인 해초에 기반한 자극적이지 않은 국수 국물과 아주 달랐다.  코베 야마테 대학에서 일본의 전통 식문화 교수이자 일본 음식에 대한 글을 쓰는 오쿠무라 아야오Okumura Ayao 씨는 예전 1953년 처음으로 라면을 먹고 충격을 받았는데,  “이 국물을 먹고는 더 커지고 강해지는 것 같았다”고 회상한다.


일본 후쿠오카에서 라면을 파는 야타이


미국인들도 밀과 동물성 단백질의 영양학적 우수성을 적극 홍보했고, 라멘은 영양가가 높다는 신망을 얻으며, 배급에 지친 사람들에게 환영을 받았다. 그리고 불경기에 라멘 야타이를 운영하는 일은 소규모 창업이 아직 가능했던 몇 안 되는 기회 가운데 하나였다. 폭격을 당한 도시에서 노동자 계급이 야타이 주변에 모여 라멘을 먹으면서, 점차 라멘은 도시의 생활과 연관이 되었다. 

라멘은 아마 오늘날 일본에서 가장 인기 있는 음식일 것이다. 도쿄에만 약 5천 곳의 라멘 가게가 있다. 그러나 경제적 필요성, 미국의 밀, 중국 요리의 영향이란 과거의 조합이 라멘을 주류로 나아가게 했으며, 이후 일본이 먹는 방식을 영원히 바꾸어 놓았다. 


https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/how-did-ramen-become-popular

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문화는 삶이다. 


누구는 먹고살 만해야만 문화가 발전한다고 주장한다. 그렇게 생각하기 쉽다. 나도 한때는 그런 생각에 사로잡혀 있었지만, 그건 거짓말일 수 있다. 그 말이 옳다면, 가난하던 시절에는, 그리고 가난한 나라에는 문화가 없다는 말과 같다. 그런데 실제로 그러한가? 아니다. 


쿠바는 경제적으로 분명 한국보다 못 살지만, 오히려 문화는 더 발달했을지 모른다. 쿠바에 다녀온 사람들은 하나같이 이런 이야기를 한다.


"쿠바 사람들은 참 밝다. 사람이 모이는 곳에서는 늘 춤과 음악이 함께하고, 이야기가 넘친다." 


이런 모습이 문화가 아니라면 무엇이 문화인가? 콘서트가 열리는 음악당에 가고, 그림이 걸려 있는 미술관에 가야지만 문화인가? 문화는 일상생활 속에서 살아가는 사람들이 즐거이 누리는 것이 그 본질이 아니던가. 그런 맥락에서 경제가 발전해야 문화도 발전한다는 주장은 경제발전을 최고의 가치로 삼은 발전론자들의 허상일 것이다. 그리고 사람들은 그것이 최고인 양 믿고 따르게 된다. 한국이 그 좋은 예가 될 것이다.


물론 경제가 발전하면 문화를 생업으로 삼는 전문가 집단이 발달할 수는 있겠다. 그를 통해 더 세련되고 멋진 문화가 나타날 것이다. 그렇지만 경제가 발전해야만 문화도 발전한다는 논리 자체가 거짓이라는 점은 틀림없다. 문화는 경제발전에 앞서 정치적 자유, 기회의 평등 같은 민주적인 가치가 제대로 실현된 곳에서 발전한다. 쿠바는 경제적으로 낙후되었을지 모를지언정, 사회경제적으로는 우리보다 더 민주적이고 평등한 곳일 수 있다.


문화에 미치는 경제의 중요성은 아예 무시하거나 부정하지는 않겠다. 하지만 경제발전만이 아니라, 그보다는 다양성이 확보될 수 있는 사회정치적 조건이 마련되어야 문화가 꽃을 피울 수 있다. 우리가 현재 겪고 있는 문화의 부재(?)는 경제적 궁핍 때문에 오는 것이 아니라, 사회정치적 자유와 평등의 부재에서 오는 것이 아닐까.

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조선시대에 가부장제에 근거한 공동체가 운영되던 모습을 보면, 그 안에서 기근이나 흉년에 대비하여 중요한 역할을 담당했던 한 축은 역시 지역 유지나 지주층이 아니었을까 한다. 

그만큼 그네들을 어떻게 공동체 질서에 편입시켜서 활동하도록 하느냐가 중요한 관건이었는데, 이것이 조선 말기가 되면서 나라 질서가 어지러워지자 통제되지 않는, 즉 무한 이기심을 채우는 상황으로 나아가면서 공동체 질서가 완전히 망가진 것이 아닌가.

거기에다 새로 들어온 일제와 근대적 질서는 스스로 무언가 재편하고 정리를 하기도 전에 조선 사회를 완전히 끝장내 버렸고, 그렇게 수동적으로 근대사회로 접어들게 되었다.


여기서 제기하고자 하는 것은 흔히 공동체의 복원이라고 할 때, 그것이 어떠한 공동체인가에 대한 적확한 상이 없다는 점이다. 

그렇다고 과거의 공동체 그대로를 의미하는 것은 아닐 것이다. 

그렇다면 과연 공동체는 무엇이든 올바른 것인가? 공동체는 만능인가에 대한 반성과 함께 어떠한 공동체를 말하는 것인지 확실하게 할 필요가 있겠다. 이와 연관하여 얼마 전 김종철 선생이 강연에서 과거 가부장제에 입각한 공동체 질서를 이야기하다가 세간의 비웃음을 샀던 일을 잊을 수 없다. 솔직히 나도 그러한 공동체라면 좀 거시기하다.

즉, 그것이 공동체이든 공동체가 아니든 민주적이고 경제적으로 공정하게 운영되는 원리와 원칙만 있다면 문제가 없는 것은 아닌가 하는 생각을 떨칠 수 없다. 과연 공동체는 바람직한 것인가, 공동체만 이루면 되는 것인가?


또 하나는 과거의 지역 유지나 지주층과 같은 현재의 집단을 어떻게 포섭할 것인가 하는 점이다. 공산혁명처럼 그냥 목을 치고 처단할까? 그런 사회가 오래가지 못하는 것은 물론, 문제를 안고 있다는 사실은 이미 역사에서 증명되었다. 조선시대에 그들을 포섭할 수 있었던 것은 역시 농업이 근간인 사회이다 보니 노동력 제공이 가장 큰 역할을 하지 않았을까? 지금도 그 사실에는 변함이 없지만 지금은 워낙 다양한 방법으로 충당할 수 있으니 그때와 상황이 좀 다르다고 볼 수도 있겠다. 

어쨌든 지난날 양반 가문이었던 집안의 이야기를 들어보면 양반, 그거 아무나 하는 것이 아니었다. 사회적 지위와 부를 쌓는 만큼 공동체에 정신적으로 물질적으로 희생해야 했다. 그러한 일이 자연스럽게 잘 이루어질 때 공동체는 그만큼 건강하게 잘 유지가 되었다.

그런데 지금은 어떠한가? 지금의 지도층이라는 집단은 어떤 식으로 포섭하거나 강제해야 할 것인가? 맘씨 좋고 유식한 부유층을 만나 우리의 뜻에 동참하자고 설득하거나, 아니면 그러한 사람이 공동체를 주도하도록 할 것인가? 지금 시대에 그러한 일은 어불성설이 아닐까 한다.


마지막으로 신자유주의의 시대에 공동체 질서를 어떻게 운영해 나아가느냐가 문제일 것 같다. 공동체로 소박한 경제질서를 유지하며 살고 싶지만 그렇게 살 수 없는 세상임은 만천하가 다 아는 사실이다. 아니, 산속이나 농촌 깊숙이 푹 박혀서 세상의 체계와 상관없이 유유자적하게 살아간다면 아무 문제가 되지 않는다. 솔직히 귀농자 중에 그런 사람이 없지 않다. 그런데 그렇게 살아가는 것이 모두에게 통용될 수 있는가? 


아무튼 생각하면 할수록 참 어려운 문제이고 답도 잘 안 보인다. 어려운 수학문제가 사람에게 도전정신을 안겨주고 그걸 풀었을 때 희열을 느끼듯이, 이 문제 또한 그러한 유형이 아닌가 한다. 평생 살아가면서 풀어야 할 문제...


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