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Distortions to Agricultural Incentives: A Global Perspective, 1955 to 2007 Kym Anderson University of Adelaide and CEPR Infoshop book launch and Rural Development Seminar, World Bank, Washington DC, 5 November 2008 Financial assistance from the World Bank Trust Funds, particularly from DfID and BNPP, plus in-knd support from IFPRI, are gratefully acknowledged, as are the contributions of the country case study authors and the Washington- and Adelaide-based teams. Views expressed are the authors’ alone and not necessarily those of the World Bank or its Executive Directors, nor IFPRI. Research project details are at www.worldbank.org/agdistortions What is this book about? The extent to which governments can’t resist distorting prices in agricultural markets How that intervention has evolved since 1950s Why it matters What alternative, more cost-effective measures are available to deal with food security, inequality and poverty Agric policies: govts. can’t resist Haberler Report to GATT in 1958 warned of agric protection growth in high-income countries (HICs) reducing market access opportunities for agric-exporting developing countries (DCs) Meanwhile, newly independent DCs saw agric export taxes and multiple exchange rates as major sources of govt revenue to support their import-substituting industrialization strategy further reducing incomes of the world’s poor (DC farmers) When D. Gale Johnson published his 1973 book on World Agriculture in Disarray, he added that both sets of countries were insulating their domestic food markets exacerbating international food price volatility and slowing global recovery to shocks The early evidence The anti-agric and anti-trade policy biases of DCs were quantified for 1960-84 by the Krueger/Schiff/Valdes study of 18 developing countries but not included were the 3 biggest (China, India, Indonesia) The agric protection growth of HICs that Haberler feared was documented for WE and NE Asia for select years to early 1980s by Anderson, Hayami & others (1986) The assistance to farmers in HICs has been ably documented by OECD’s PSEs/CSEs since 1986, but there was no comparable set of numbers for DCs The good news of the past 2 decades, after the Krueger/Schiff/Valdes study: Many developing countries have undertaken major economic reforms since the 1980s phased out their agric export taxes, reduced manuf protection, and allowed markets to determine the value of their currency Some rich countries also have begun to reduce trade-distorting supports for their farmers partly through policy re-instrumentation towards somewhat decoupled measures Even so, there were believed to be many distortionary policies still in place One purpose of present study was to document more fully the extent of DC reforms Conclusion: much achieved, but much reform still needed Global modeling results suggest the reforms since the early 1980s have taken the world at least halfway towards free goods markets Remaining distortionary agric policies are responsible for 70% of the global welfare cost of 2004 merchandise trade distortions even though agric is only 3% of global GDP They are also responsible for much of the instability in int’l agric markets They appear to be net contributors to poverty in developing countries What did this study involve? 90 consultants covered 75 countries (>90% of world agriculture, population and GDP) Measured Nominal Rate of Assistance (NRA) for key farm products, covering 70% of production value NRA = percentage by which domestic prices for farm products exceed those in international markets Also generated a Relative Rate of Assistance (RRA) to producers of agric relative to non-agric tradable goods Defined as RRA = [(1+NRAagt/100)(1+NRAnonagt/100)] – 1 Compiled in a global annual database (1955-2007), available at www.worldbank.org/agdistortions Project’s focus countries: number and shares (%) of the global economy No. of countries 21 Pop’n share 10 AgGDP share 6 GDP share 1 Asia 12 51 37 10 Latin America 8 8 8 5 European TEs 14 7 67 4 High-income 20 14 33 76 WORLD TOTAL 75 90% 91% 96% Africa Global coverage of NRA estimates for 30 major agric products Grains (10 products) Share (%) Share (%) of global ag of global ag exports production 85 90 Oilseeds (6 products) 78 85 Tropical crops (7) 74 71 Livestock products (7) 72 88 SUM OF ABOVE (30) 77 85 Two summary indicators Inter-sectoral neutrality in assistance is least harmful to welfare (=> RRA=0) Intra-agric sectoral neutrality, at least in terms of equality of NRAs between agric exportables and agric import-competing subsectors, is least harmful to gains from agric trade and to ‘thinning’ int’l markets for agric goods (which adds to their instability) Measured by a trade bias index (TBI), defined as TBI = [(1+NRAagx/100)/(1+NRAagm/100)] – 1 Evolution from negative to zero average relative rate of assistance (RRA) for all DCs 100 80 percent 60 40 20 0 -20 1965-69 1970-74 1975-79 1980-84 1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-04 -40 -60 NRA non-ag tradables NRA ag tradables RRA 11 RRA rise is steepest for Asia among the DC regions 10 0 percent -10 1965-69 1970-74 1975-79 1980-84 1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-04 -20 -30 -40 -50 -60 -70 Asia Africa LAC -60 Zimbabwe Cote d 'ivoire Tanzania Nigeria Zambia Ethiopia Argentina Senegal Bangladesh Ukraine Egypt Pakistan Sri Lanka Nicaragua Madagascar Thailand Cameroon South Africa Bulgaria New Zealand Australia Dominican Brazil Uganda Vietnam Malaysia China Chile Sudan Ecuador Poland Mexico Kenya Ghana Indonesia Russia Slovakia US Canada India Mozambique Philippines Estonia Turkey Colombia Czech Rep Hungary Spain France Lithuania Portugal Italy Denmark Latvia Germany Finland Sweden UK Austria Netherlands Romania Ireland Taiwan Slovenia Japan Norway Switzerland Korea Cross-country dispersion in RRA, 2000-04 140 90 40 -10 150 World’s RRAs and TBIs: 1980-84 vs 2000-04 100 Japan Japan 50 WE WE Asia NA 0 ECA LAC Africa Africa NA ANZ ANZ LAC -50 Asia -0.6 -0.5 -.4 -0.3 -0.2 Trade Bias Index RRA Triangle: 1980-84, Circle: 2000-04 -0.1 0 Anti-trade bias: in DCs, NRA ag export taxation disappearing, but NRA ag importcompeting is >0 & growing 50 30 10 -10 1955-59 1960-64 1965-69 1970-74 1975-79 1980-84 1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-04 -30 -50 import-competing exportables total Long-run trend in NRA ag import-competing goods is growing as fast in DCs as in HICs: a worry for WTO 80 70 percent 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1955-59 1960-64 1965-69 1970-74 1975-79 1980-84 1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-04 High-income countries Developing countries How far have policy reforms reduced the disarray in world agricultural markets? PE New partial equilibrium measures, based on J. Anderson/P. Neary’s Trade Restrictiveness theory but modified to account for difference between ag NRAs and CTEs (both of which can be positive or negative), are estimated for each of our 75 countries: a Welfare Reduction Index (WRI), and a Trade Reduction Index (TRI) We also estimate global WRI and TRI for each of our commodities Welfare reduction index: DCs, HICs and ETEs, 1960 to 2007 (percent) 100 80 60 40 20 0 1960 -64 1965 -69 1970 -74 1975 -79 1980 -84 1985 -89 1990 -94 1995 -99 2000 -04 2005 -07 Developing countries High - income countries Europe’s transition econs. Trade reduction index: DCs, ETEs and HICs, 1960 to 2007 (percent) 70 50 30 10 -10 1960-64 1965-69 1970-74 1975-79 1980-84 1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-04 2005-07 Developing countries Europe’s transition econs. High-income countries Wool GWRI Cassava Rubber 60 Coconut Palmoil Coffee Sunflower Wheat Maize Soybean Rapeseed Egg Pigmeat Tea Oat Sheepmeat Millet Barley Cocoa Sesame Sorghum Groundnut Cotton Poultry Beef Milk Sugar Rice Global WRI & TRI (%), by product, 2000-04 160 140 120 100 80 GTRI 40 20 0 -20 -40 How far have policy reforms reduced the disarray in world agricultural markets? GE New global, economy-wide CGE modeling results on effects of distortions also suggest that, since the early 1980s, the world has gone more than half way towards fully liberalizing goods markets, in terms of welfare and trade effects of policies affecting goods markets But agric now account for 70% of the global welfare cost of goods-trade-distorting policies even though agric and food account for only 3% of global GDP and 6% of global trade Reflecting in part the wide dispersion in agric NRAs not only between countries but also across products Reform effects: retrospective since 1980-84, and prospectively as of 2004 Reform from 1980-84 to 2004 Move to free trade as of 2004 Global econ welfare, $b (%) $233 (0.8%) $168b (0.6%) DCs’ econ welfare, $b (%) $73b (1.0%) $65b (0.9%) DC share of global ag output 58% 62% 62% 65% DC share of global ag exports 43% 55% 55% 64% % rise in DC ag (nonag) sectoral value added 4.9%(0.4%) 5.6%(1.9%) Insulation of food markets persists, so volatility of int’l food prices continues Fluctuations around trend NRAag from year to year remain common Consider the case of rice: insulating policies have ‘thinned’ its int’l market <7% of global production is exported, versus 24% for wheat So year-to-year coefficient of variation of int’l rice price is high: 0.63 compared with 0.44 for wheat Rice NRA for South Asia is inversely correlated with int’l price 600 30 20 500 10 300 -20 -30 200 -40 -50 100 Pw S Asia 2004 2002 2000 1998 1996 1994 1992 1990 1988 1986 1984 1982 1980 1978 1976 1974 - 1972 -60 1970 USD -10 -70 NRA % 0 400 … and also for Southeast Asia 600 30 500 20 10 0 NRA % 300 -10 200 -20 Pw (USD) SE Asia 2004 2002 2000 1998 1996 1994 1992 1990 1988 1986 1984 1982 1980 1978 -40 1976 - 1974 -30 1972 100 1970 USD 400 True for non-rice products too Most farm product NRAs tend to be negatively correlated with movements in international product price On average, barely half of the change in an international price is transmitted to the domestic market within the first year, for the top dozen traded farm products This is becoming a bigger issue as climate change adds to volatility of crop seasons Some research questions still to be addressed 1. Political economy question: Will trend RRAs for HICs and DCs converge above zero, rather than at zero (where intersectoral distortion is zero)? -100 0 100 200 300 400 Will DCs move, like HICs did, to positive RRAs as their incomes rise? -1 0 1 2 Ln real GDP per capita HIC RRA obs DC RRA obs HIC fitted values DC fitted values 3 -50 0 50 100 150 200 Korea and Taiwan followed Japan … 7 8 9 Ln real GDP per capita Japan Korea Taiwan 10 -50 0 50 100 150 200 … so will China and India too, to avoid social unrest from widening urban-rural income gap? 7 8 9 Ln real GDP per capita China Japan Korea Taiwan 10 India Will growth in emerging economies continue to push up int’l food prices? China’s impact so far has been much less on int’l prices for food than for minerals and energy But partly because of rising RRA over the past 3 decades True also of India, where Green Revolution also contributed to food self sufficiency after the 1960s Now with China’s and India’s RAAs close to zero, future agric import growth could accelerate if, on the one hand, they chose to not raise their RRA any more On the other hand, what if China and India (and other DCs) choose to follow Korea and Taiwan with agric protection growth? which their WTO commitments would allow for some time yet, especially if Doha does not dramatically reduce tariff binding overhangs What are the implications for WTO negotiations? Need large cuts to bound tariffs and subsidies so as to reduce binding overhang & thus prospect of: agric protection growth in DCs as their incomes rise, and NRA fluctuations around trend via variable trade barriers (because lib’n would ‘thicken’ int’l food markets) Need to not only ban agric export subsidies but also discipline agric export restrictions at WTO? Proposed ‘Special Products’ and ‘Special Safeguard Mechanism’ would add to agric protection growth, to dispersion of NRAs, and to int’l food price volatility What alternative policy initiatives would boost food security and reduce poverty? Instead of variable trade measures, encourage governments to pour more of their support into boosting agric R&D, rural health & education, and rural infrastructure, and improving agric factor and product markets Payoff from ag R&D investments has risen with higher prices & spectre of climate change Hotter, drier, more volatile seasons adds to need for: • more-integrated global food markets so as to better share the burden of fluctuating weather, and • efficient water markets Thanks! For all Agric Distortions Research Project working papers and global distortions database, see www.worldbank.org/agdistortions Two forthcoming books are: Anderson, K., J. Cockburn and W. Martin (eds.), Agricultural Price Distortions, Inequality and Poverty Washington DC: World Bank, forthcoming March 2010 Anderson, K. (ed.), The Political Economy of Agricultural Price Distortions , Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming late 2010