By David Loyn
BBC international development correspondent
The head of the World Trade Organization, Pascal Lamy, has called for aid policies to be refocused to improve agriculture.
Speaking in the week that the world woke up to the food price crisis, Mr Lamy's demand is radical.
He said food aid needed to be increased but, more than that, improvements in agriculture needed to be put back at the heart of development spending.
He said it was complex and could not be done overnight.
But, he added in an interview with the BBC, the shift in emphasis was essential.
As far as development assistance is concerned, agriculture has not been the main focus of the last decade and has to be the main focus of the coming times.
Mr Lamy said he believed that after seven years of negotiations, the Doha round, a new deal designed to make trade freer and fairer for the poorest countries, could be achieved.
But the immediate reaction of a number of countries to the food price shock has been in the other direction, with France wanting higher subsidies for farmers, and a number of food-exporting countries imposing restrictions on exports.
(BBC)
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