Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
School of Oriental & African Studies Agricultural labour productivity and food prices: development impacts and indicators 12th April 2012 Andrew Dorward Centre for Development, Environment and Policy School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 1 Questions What are the impacts of the food price spikes? What are food prices? What are the likely micro & macro impacts of food price changes? What has happened to food prices? What have been the short term impacts of food price spikes? What are the long term impacts? What are the implications of this? What indicators can we use to better reflect/ monitor these impacts? Agricultural development Food price impacts April 2012 2 What are food prices? Measures of value relative to consumer incomes & other goods and services consumed Measures of value relative to producer incomes, other commodities produced by food producers, and inputs used in production (land, labour, energy, capital items) Standard measurement problematic when relative values of different comparators change over time What are the critical comparators? Prices of other consumer goods (which consumers)? Consumer incomes (which consumers)? Prices of producer inputs? Prices of alternative products? April 2012 3 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 4 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 5 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 6 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 7 What are the likely micro impacts of food price rises? Direct effects Consumers: Substitution effect Income effect Producers: Substitution effect ‘Cost’ or ‘profit’ effect Producer effects may be lagged or capital constrained or damped by price volatility / risk April 2012 8 What are the likely micro impacts of food price rises? Sufficient access to capital Insufficient access to capital Product Labour Labour Product Labour Labour Income Income -ion demand supply -ion demand supply Season Producers with surplus Producers with deficits Pure consumers 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 large +++ +++ +++ na = ++ ++ ++ = ++ na na + small ++ ++ ++ na = + + ++ = small + ... … … = - - - large + - na + - - -- -- na na na --- na ++ -- -- na na ++ ++ Na na - + na Na - + + + + April 2012 9 What are the likely micro impacts of food price rises? Indirect effects – linkages Consumers (negative) expenditure linkages Producers (positive) expenditure linkages upstream linkages - labour, inputs, land April 2012 10 Factors influencing likely impacts of exogenous food price increases Positive impacts of high food prices: increased real incomes & reduced poverty more access to capital more surplus producers more wealthy consumers more wealthy economy falling input (eg fertiliser) prices low price volatility Negative impacts of high food prices: reduced real incomes & increased poverty less access to capital more deficit producers poorer consumers less wealthy economy rising input (eg fertiliser) prices high price volatility Good & bad impacts multiplied by strong linkages in the economy and by strong price transmission from external markets February 2011 11 What are the likely micro impacts of food price rises? Indeterminate, but … high price volatility reduces benefits of high prices to surplus producers without benefits to deficit producers or consumers improved producer access to seasonal capital improves benefits to surplus & deficit producers without harming consumers more equitable land and income distribution likely to reduce negative effects & promote positive effects of high prices: with more equitable land distribution benefits to surplus producers more widely distributed in the economy production responses likely to be more labour & less capital intensive (promoting labour demand to benefit land poor farmers & landless labourers wage incomes); more equitable income distribution among consumers means fewer very poor consumers April 2012 12 What are the likely macro impacts of food price rises? Fixed rate tax/ subsidy Tax Subsidy Importing country Exporting country Ad valorem tax/ subsidy Tax Subsidy Increase in Increase in Some Some tax income subsidy per reduction in reduction in per tonne tonne tax income if subsidy cost imported but imported but increased if increased some some price reduces price reduces reduction in reduction in demand demand imports imports Some Some Increase in Increase in increase in increase in tax income subsidy cost tax income if subsidy cost per tonne per tonne increased if increased exported and exported and price price also in tonnes also in tonnes increases increases exported exported supply supply April 2012 13 What were / are the short term impacts of high food prices? Modelling / simulations (‘hunger’ and ‘poverty’ estimates) High food prices good for producers of food - farmers … But bad for food buying producers … Poverty impacts Hunger impacts Malnutrition impacts But not so bad after allowing for wage impacts??? Field studies High prices bad for both rural & urban poor Poverty, hunger, malnutrition education …. Gallup Welfare Poll: self reported food insecurity (Headey) High food prices increase it, economic growth reduces it Increased food insecurity in Africa Decreased food insecurity in Asia Lower global increase in food insecurity than FAO/WB April 2012 14 What has happened to food (grain) prices? February 2011 15 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 16 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 17 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 18 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 19 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 20 What has happened to food (grain) prices? Fallen relative to expenditure baskets of consumers with growing incomes Constant relative to expenditure baskets of poor consumers Fallen relative to incomes of consumers with growing incomes (!!) Constant / lower fall relative to incomes of poor consumers No clear trend relative to other agricultural commodities Wide fluctuations but general fall relative to oil and fertiliser prices April 2012 21 Long term drivers of food price changes Context of growing populations with growing grain consumption per person in growing economies Increased demand counteracted by Area change Technical & institutional change April 2012 22 Area and Technical & institutional change Annual change Cereal land Arable land Cereal land Arable land Cereal yield Period 19612009 19612008 20002009 20002008 19612009 20002009 High income (OECD) Upper middle income Lower Low middle World income income -0.08% 0.77% 0.79% 1.63% 0.65% -0.09% 1.77% 0.65% 0.95% 0.60% -0.28% 0.49% 0.53% 2.43% 0.55% -0.46% -0.12% 0.25% 1.22% -0.02% 1.90% 2.30% 2.04% 0.96% 1.85% 1.43% 1.73% 1.60% 1.18% 1.38% April 2012 23 Technical, institutional & structural change Innovation driven by production incentives with high food prices, depressed by low food prices? Low food prices relative to incomes are a global public good that require globally coordinated public investment by national governments Low food prices relative to incomes Non rival and non excludable Global Good High prices immediate harm with long term effects on individual & hence national welfare & development Low food prices relative to incomes the basis for economic growth, development and wider processes of structural change April 2012 24 Energy, materials, capital, technology, knowledge, institutions COORDINATION processes, scale, locations, populations, timing increased / constant per capita food availability higher labour productivity in food production falling food prices relative to wages/income, releasing labour for production of other goods and services AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS Later (?) Negative feedbacks Natural resource use, Waste, Environmental degradation, Biodiversity loss, Health? Inequity? ? Globalisation? Earlier(?) Positive feedbacks Capital, Technology, Knowledge, Health? Poverty reduction, Globalisation? increased income available for purchase of non food goods & services Increased demand for & supply of non-food goods & services increased income available for purchase of goods & services Long term impacts of high food prices? releasing labour for production of other goods & services falling ‘other’ prices relative to wages/income, INDUSTRIAL, SERVICE, KNOWLEDGE REVOLUTIONS higher labour productivity, other goods & services increased / constant per capita ‘other’ availability COORDINATION processes, scale, locations, populations, timing Energy, materials, capital, technology, knowledge, institutions Implications? High food prices relative to income are bad for the poor in both the short and long term, Increasing food or food equivalent productivity of agricultural workers is critical for low food prices, food security & development Small farm development (increasing their aggregate productivity of labour & land) is normally a critical but temporary stage in this What does this mean for agricultural development policies with Climate change? Environmental / resource threats? Growing food demand by rising, more affluent population? Climate change mitigation? Environmental / resource threat mitigation? April 2012 26 Energy, materials, capital, technology, knowledge, institutions COORDINATION processes, scale, locations, populations, timing Earlier(?) Positive feedbacks Capital, Technology, Knowledge, Health? Poverty reduction, Globalisation? increased / constant per capita food availability higher labour productivity in food production AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS falling food prices relative to wages/income, releasing labour for production of other goods and services Later (?) Negative feedbacks Natural resource use, Waste, Environmental degradation, Biodiversity loss, Health? Inequity? ? Globalisation? increased income available for purchase of non food goods & services Increased demand for & supply of non-food goods & services increased income available for purchase of goods & services releasing labour for production of other goods & services falling ‘other’ prices relative to wages/income, INDUSTRIAL, SERVICE, KNOWLEDGE higher labour productivity, REVOLUTother goods & IONS services increased / constant per capita ‘other’ availability COORDINATION processes, scale, locations, populations, timing Energy, materials, capital, technology, knowledge, institutions Conclusions We need to pay attention to different relative food price changes for poor/ rich consumers and producers the short / medium term poverty and food insecurity impacts of high food prices the long term developmental impacts of high food prices Short term impacts are serious but can be ameliorated by economic growth Long term undermining of growth is particularly worrying and challenging and demand a rethink of current development models Smallholder agriculture offers critical but temporary and challenging opportunities How can we simultaneously raise agricultural labour force productivity and agricultural yields and reduce energy and material inputs? April 2012 28 Fundamental (long term structural) challenges need holistic indicators April 2012 29 Cereal Equivalent Productivity of Agricultural Labour (CEPAL) - value added February 2011 30 Cereal Equivalent Land Yield (CELY) - value added February 2011 31 Cereal Equivalent Productivity of Inorganic Fertiliser (CEPIF) - value added February 2011 32 Illustrative sustainable agricultural productivity targets (added value) April 2012 33 Fundamental (long term structural) challenges need holistic indicators April 2012 34 Food price measure: Food Expenditure Ratio, Decile 1 (FERD1) April 2012 35 Food price measure: Food Expenditure Ratio, Quintile 3 (FERQ3) April 2012 36 Explanations for extreme values Costs of calorific requirements calculated with international not national grain prices. Index grain weights determined by relative international not national production and consumption patterns,. In poor agrarian economies with significant numbers of poor food deficit producers, a substantial proportion of calorific requirements may be own produce not purchased, reducing vulnerability to price increases (though capital constraints and hungry periods may still make them very vulnerable to price increases) Poor people do reduce their FER with damaging ‘coping’ responses - switches from more diverse diets, reduced intake of more nutritious food, borrowing, drawing on savings, asset sales, withdrawal from school, etc., First decile consumption share estimates in SSA may be too low April 2012 37 Fundamental (‘long term’ structural) challenges Raise agricultural labour productivity in poor countries Maintain / increase yields per ha Increase yields per unit energy and material inputs Lower food prices for the poor Improve targets and indicators (post 2015 IDGs) Extend analysis to include water & energy use/ productivity, land rights/ access, micro nutrients ….. Reduce inefficiency Reduce waste Reduce consumption of inefficient (grain consuming) livestock products Work together to take climate change, environment, justice seriously in in all sectors & in our lifestyles Seriously question all development models April 2012 38 School of Oriental & African Studies Dorward, A.R. (2012). The short and medium term impacts of rises in staple food prices. Working paper http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/13478/ Dorward, A.R. (2012). Agricultural labour productivity and food prices: fundamental development impacts and indicators. Working paper,. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/13483/ 39 Consumer impacts: substitution effect April 2012 40 Consumer impacts: income effect April 2012 41 Producer impacts: substitution effect April 2012 42 Producer impacts: profit effect April 2012 43 What has happened to food (grain) prices? April 2012 44 What has happened to food (grain) prices? Deflated by US CPI or stylised high food expenditure CPI? April 2012 45 Messages We need to pay attention to different relative food price changes for poor/ rich consumers and producers the short / medium term poverty and food insecurity impacts of high food prices the long term developmental impacts of high food prices Short term impacts are serious but can be ameliorated by economic growth Long term undermining of growth is particularly worrying and challenging and demand a rethink of current development models How can we simultaneously raise agricultural labour force productivity and agricultural yields and reduce energy and material inputs? Smallholder agriculture offers critical but temporary and challenging opportunities April 2012 46 Causes of the 2008 spike? Policy changes Reduced R&D Water scarcity Reduced subsidies Oil Oil prices prices Stagnant Weather productivity shocks Falling supply Biofuels Biofuels Loss of land Population growth Economic growth Production lags Higher prices Low stocks Rising demand Environmental changes Financial speculation Volatility: price spikes Stakeholder stocking April 2012 What has happened to food prices? Rich buyers, sellers Decline relative to income, Long due to labour productivity term increases from energy trend substitution & technical change Short More expensive relative to term other goods and services, spike relative to inputs Less / emerging poor (buyers & sellers) Poor (net buyers) Always high relative to income More expensive relative to income, more difficult to afford April 2012 48 What is going to happen? Rising energy prices? Population growth Water scarcity? Economic growth Climate change impacts? Impacts on labour productivity, incomes, equity, economies, food security, food stocks, price variability? Implications for international policies: Increase stocks Raise supply - productivity Whose productivity where? What constraints? Low productivity traps, price tight ropes? What policies, what technologies? Reduce demand? Manage risk April 2012 49 What to do, how, by/with who, where? Policy changes Reduced R&D Water scarcity Reduced subsidies Oil Oilprices prices Stagnant Weather productivity shocks Falling supply Biofuels Biofuels Loss of land Population growth Economic growth Production lags Higher prices Low stocks Rising demand Environmental changes Financial speculation Volatility: price spikes Stakeholder stocking April 2012 What to do, how, by/with who, where? Prevent Market Cope A inputs output markets insurance B finance State rules transparency insurance, agricultural options consistency R&D finance institutions infrastructure safety nets macro-economic management C D Notes: Work in progress - stylised contents & location, instruments extend across & contribute to both prevention & coping; roles & providers differ between contexts (eg poor, less poor economies) & between levels (eg farm, national, regional, international) - especially for finance & insurance. Politicians are critical! Civil society?