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Strategies to reduce food security risks - production, trade, finance, and speculation - Joachim von Braun Center for Development Research, University of Bonn “Feeding the world in 2050“, Policy Symposium under the Irish Presidency of the EU, Dublin, January 15th &16th , 2013 Overview 1. Food security risks: perceptions and framework 2. Production and productivity 3. Trade and stocks 4. Finance and speculation 5. Scope for EU-engagement Top 5 global risks 2013 (perceptions by likelihood and impact in next 10 years) global leaders perceptions changed: Food shortage crises listed among top 5 Impact: scale 1 to 5 1. Major systemic financial failure 4.1 2. Water supply crises 4.0 3. Chronic fiscal imbalances 4.0 4. Food shortage crises 4.0 5. Diffusion of weapons of mass distructions 3.9 Global Risks 2013 Eighth Edition, World Economic Forum Food security risk is the result of several sets of risks Source: J. von Braun 2009 J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Food shortage crises among the top 10 most connected global risks 2013 Connections of one global risk with other risks: scale 0 to 50 Complexity! 1. Global governance failure 44 Food crises 2. Severe income disparity 41 are connected 3. Critical fragile states 40 to all top 4. Food shortage crises 33 connected 5. Mismanaged urbanization 33 global risks 6. Pervasive entrenched corruption 32 7. Extreme volatility in energy and agricultural prices 30 8. Failure of climate change adaptation 30 9. Unsustainable population growth 30 10. Chronic fiscal imbalances 29 J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Global Risks Report 2013, WEF The 2050 world food equation is risk prone Supply = Land (degradation) Water (scarcity) Productivity & technology Labor & farm structure Climate change Demand Population (growth) Income (growth, urbanization) Poverty and inequality Consumer behavior, waste Bio-energy Trade and Markets Supermarkets Protection Financial markets Food stocks J. von Braun, ZEF 2013 Changed price regime as a consequence of changes in the global food equation 1000 300 rice $/tonne 900 wheat $/tonne 800 250 cereal price index 700 200 500 150 Index 400 100 300 200 50 100 0 0 1/2000 5/2000 9/2000 1/2001 5/2001 9/2001 1/2002 5/2002 9/2002 1/2003 5/2003 9/2003 1/2004 5/2004 9/2004 1/2005 5/2005 9/2005 1/2006 5/2006 9/2006 1/2007 5/2007 9/2007 1/2008 5/2008 9/2008 1/2009 5/2009 9/2009 1/2010 5/2010 9/2010 1/2011 5/2011 9/2011 1/2012 5/2012 Price ($/mt) 600 Source:FAO, FAO Giews. Prices have increased sharply and remain volatile 7 Which „t“ is relevant for which food security problem? • Long-term (decade/year): >nutritional status (stunting); water-, land-use; climate, technology; polit. change; investments • Medium-term (months): >nutrient deficiencies (Cal., micro-nutrients); weather, grain stocks • Short-term (weeks, days, seconds): >nutrition shocks in early childhood; trade shocks (export bans), shocks in commodity and financial markets Optimal balance between short- and long-term action? Overview 1. Food security risks: perceptions and framework 2. Production and productivity 3. Trade and stocks 4. Finance and speculation 5. Scope for EU-engagement The production challenges and opportunities 1. Cope with the 100% increase in demand by 2050 > labor, land, water, capital, total factor productivity 2. Closing ‘yield gaps’ > reduce differences between current yields and potentials; 45% to 70% for most crops (Müller et.al. Nature 2012). 3. ‘Sustainable intensification’ >increase yields while decreasing the environmental impacts of agriculture 4. Enhancing the emerging bio-economy >EU to provide leadership in R&D to deal with the tradeoffs opportunities from industrial bio-technologies, new plant breeding, innovation in processing, new products, waste reduction; integration and connecting value chains to “value webs” Productivity growth remains central in view of growing demand Total factor productivity in world agriculture (Source: Fuglie 2010) The reactions to price change What impact of price changes for production response? 1. area responses to price change, 2. yield response to price change, and 3. all productivity enhancing responses along the food value chain. Here focus on 1. as the biggest potential short run effect Example: area allocation to wheat in countries by months 60 EU27 Planted Wheat Area (Million Hectares) Bangladesh Ethiopia 50 Brazil Uzbekistan 40 Argentina Egypt 30 Kazakhstan Turkey Ukraine 20 Australia Pakistan 10 Canada 0 2002M1 2002M2 2002M3 2002M4 2002M5 2002M6 2002M7 2002M8 2002M9 2002M… 2002M… 2002M… 2008M1 2008M2 2008M3 2008M4 2008M5 2008M6 2008M7 2008M8 2008M9 2008M… 2008M… 2008M… 2010M1 2010M2 2010M3 2010M4 2010M5 2010M6 2010M7 2010M8 2010M9 2010M… 2010M… 2010M… USA Source: Haile, Kalkuhl and von Braun, ZEF manuscript (work in progress) 2013 J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Russia India China Area Response to Prices and to Price Volatility Global annual (area) response (price elasticities) Wheat Corn Rice Future price -0.01 0.04* Spot price 0.06*** 0.07** 0.03*** Volatility -0.17** -0.06 -0.08** Source: Haile, Kalkuhl and von Braun, ZEF manuscript (work in progress); further variables (lag area, fertilizer prices, time trend and constant are omitted) • Prices increase matters: (+10% price > 0.1 % response and .5 % long run) • Volatility reduces response! J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Transnational Land-Investments are a response to food security risks and opportunities Need for transparent and fair land markets, domestic and international J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Source: Land Matrix Homepage (accessed May 6, 2012) Data: Land Matrix Project, April 2012 Implications of findings about price responses The production system does respond to increasing prices (incentives) but that response is reduced by volatility: • Market disruptions undermine incentives • Need for more public R&D to increase TFP J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Overview 1. Food security risks: perceptions and framework 2. Production and productivity 3. Trade and stocks 4. Finance and speculation 5. Scope for EU-engagement All now build high stocks: e.g. China, India Both countries have high stocks and influence global prices Total Cereal Stocks 300 China Million metric tonnes 250 India 200 150 100 50 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 At least need more transparency on stocking data 2010 2011 2012 Source: AMIS Sound global grain reserves policy needed • Intra-annual storage and ‚normal‘ harvest fluctuations captured mainly by private stockholders • Reserves in case of rare extreme events to assure supply for food security needed by public What global trade & stocking regimes? Scenario Trade Stocks Fiscal Burden Price Risk Autarcic supply Low high; public high low for IND, CHN; high for ROW Optimal policy portfolio moderately regulated coordinated with CHN, IND, ROW; public and private low/moderate calculable risks Total liberalization free & high low; private low high G20+ should talk about: • Explore optimal portfolio of price, trade and storage policies • Improve coordination between EU, India, China, USA, Russia (beyond AMIS) J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Overview 1. Food security risks: perceptions and framework 2. Production and productivity 3. Trade and stocks 4. Finance and speculation 5. Scope for EU-engagement There are different price movements Price of wheat Price spikes Price volatility Price trend Price of US HRW wheat in US$ per metric tone Change of the price level relative to the previous period (here: month) Deviation of a price series from the annual mean smooth, long-term average movement of prices over time 0.3 300 500 0.3 400 0.2 300 0.1 250 0.2 0 200 100 0 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 -0.1 200 0.1 150 -0.2 -0.3 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 0.0 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 100 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Classification of different price dynamics (adopted from von Braun and Tadesse 2012). New insights when price changes are decomposed into spikes, volatility, trends J. von Braun ZEF 2013 500 1000 Price movements are hard to explain today Rice 100 200 200 400 300 600 400 800 Wheat 1993m7 1998m1 2002m7 time nominal wheat price ($/mt) 2007m1 estimated price 2011m7 1993m7 1998m1 2002m7 time nominal rice price ($/mt) 2007m1 2011m7 estimated price Estimated ‘fundamental’ monthly wheat and maize prices according to global cumulative supply in the preceding 12 months (H), stock-to-use ratios (STU) and nominal GDP (monthly interpolation). Source: own calculations based on crop calendar disaggregation data of Mekbib, Kalkuhl & von Braun (2012). Observed price spikes not much explained by fundamentals J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Food price drivers: old and new Old Fundamentals • Supply / demand / stocks remain drivers • The source of old fundamentals is changing from US to emerging economies such as China, India, EU, Brazil, etc. New Fundamentals • Energy market linkages • Financial market linkages • Speculation, in combination with trade policy J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Speculation and oils prices contribute to food price SPIKES Drivers Commodity Maize Wheat Supply Shock (Millions of tons) Excessive volume of speculation (Thousands of contracts) Crude oil price (%) Soybeans Rice * *** ** *** N/A ** ** *** * Samples from January 2000 to December 2009; *,**,*** significant at 10%, 5% & 1% Food price spikes were driven mainly by excessive speculation and by demand shocks (oil price) but less by supply side shocks J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Source: von Braun and Tadesse 2012 Global to local? Transmission of international prices to domestic food prices 0 0.04 0.16 0.36 0.64 1 Combined transmission elasticities from CBoT Rice, Wheat, Soybean and Corn futures to domestic food price indices. Transmission elasticities to Indian Food Price Index: Maize Rice Wheat Soy 0.33 0.11 0.00 0.10 J. von Braun ZEF 2013 Source: own calculations (Kornher/Kalkuhl, ZEF, work in progress) The poorest and marginalized are more visible now V. Graw, C. Ladenburger: ZEF Working Paper 88, 2012 Joachim von Braun, ZEF, 2013 Implications of Food Price Spikes • Price spikes can lead to increasing malnutrition and stunting • Price spikes hurt the poor most • Macro-economic impacts (inflation, welfare spending, instability) 28 Overview 1. Food security risks: perceptions and framework 2. Production and productivity 3. Trade and stocks 4. Finance and speculation 5. Scope for EU-engagement Towards resilience: the complex food security risks call for complex responses Addressing of, and coping with food security risks with 4 sets of policy actions J. von Braun 2013 Strategic food and nutrition security agenda 1. Risk prevention: Promotion of agriculture productivity across value chains with research and technology and investment (public and private) to address price levels and risks on supply side in sustainable ways. 2. Risk management: Facilitation of reduced market volatility and spikes with appropriate stocks, more trade openness, appropriate regulation, and international cooperation. 3. Social protection: productive safety nets, (conditional) cash transfers; expanded action for nutrition security of children. 4. Insurance systems: insurance of crops, peoples health and disabilities, public insurance mechanisms for catastrophic events in poor countries (e.g. regional droughts, climate shocks) J. von Braun, ZEF 2013 What EU can do for UN and G20 initiatives 1. “Ending Hunger“ - a post MDG 2015 goal! (ending caloric deficiencies, reduced stunting, reduced micro-nutrient deficiencies) 2. Implement G20 committments re commodities futures markets regulations (caps, transparency, etc.) 3. Support for responsible international investments for food security (foreign land investments) 4. Attention to food and nutrition insecurity in G20 countries themselves (G20 countries are home of about 50 % of the world‘s hungry people) 5. EU to drive the global science agenda for food and nutrition security EU science agenda: key for international food security • Sustainable food security under climate change: modelling, benchmarking and policy research, • Sustainable growth and intensification of agricultural systems under current and future resource availability, • Assessing and reducing trade-offs between food production, biodiversity and ecosystem services, • Adaptation to climate change and Greenhouse gas mitigation See: FACCE – JPI, Strategic Research Agenda. Agriculture, Food Security, and Climate Change 2012 www.faccejpi.com J. von Braun ZEF 2013