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International Agricultural Development and Trade AAEC 3204 Introduction George W. Norton Agricultural and Applied Economics Virginia Tech Copyright 2009 Objectives Today Discuss basic dimensions of the world food situation • Availability & prices • Malnutrition • Effect of poverty • Population • Environment • Globalization Poverty and malnutrition remain problems in much of the world Why? How severe are they? Where? Does globalization help or hurt? What role does agriculture play? How do poor countries affect rich countries and vice versa? How does poverty relate to food safety, the environment, public health, energy, and food prices? These are a few of the issues addressed in this course Why is it important to understand agriculture in other countries? Agriculture is the most important sector in many developing countries and it affects agriculture in more developed countries Weeding in Bangladesh Extremes of poverty and wealth coexist in many developing countries Photo taken in Dhaka, Bangladesh Where do most of the world’s poor live? Incomes (GNP) per capita (US$) (Source: World Bank, 2005) Child mortality (per 1000 live births) Source: World Bank, 2005 Number of Undernourished People in Developing Countries by Region Percent of Population Undernourished by Country Are people hungry because the world does not produce enough food? No. In the aggregate there is a surplus of food if the World’s food supply were divided up equally Index of per capita food production. (Source: FAOSTAT Data, 2005) 200 180 160 140 Africa Latin America 100 Near East Asia 80 60 40 20 0 19 61 19 64 19 67 19 70 19 73 19 76 19 79 19 82 19 85 19 88 19 91 19 94 19 97 20 00 Index 120 Year If enough food, why do people die from hunger related causes? Lack income to purchase food • Especially elderly, sick, orphaned • Especially when food prices are high Incomes unevenly distributed Disasters How many people in the world live on less than $1.00 per day? One-fifth of the World’s population or more than a billion people Ethiopian Woman and Child In what ways do we see global interdependence? Trade, prices Capital movements Labor movements Technology Environment Energy Political Information flows What is Globalization? Expansion of economic, political, social, and cultural linkages among countries around the world Tendency toward universal application of economic, institutional, legal, political, and cultural practices Spillovers from the behavior of individuals and societies to the rest of the world Why do so many people oppose globalization? 1. Involves change, some good and some not 2. Winners and losers Can globalization be reversed? No Why has environmental degradation become an increasing problem in developing countries? Desertification Flooding Chemical pollution Soil Erosion Houses in Dhaka, Bangladesh Food Prices What has happened to food prices in the world over the past year? three years? 15 years? 40 years? Why might high (low) food prices be both good and bad? World food prices have increased significantly, especially since 2006 after a long period of stable or slowly declining prices High food prices can be good for farmers High food prices are a serious problem for low income consumers Why did food prices rise sharply from 2006 to 2008? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. High price of energy Subsidized bio-fuel production Poor weather in certain countries such as Australia Economic growth in certain countries such as China and India Certain countries have restricted exports Lack of attention to agr. research and infrastructure investments over time Continued population growth What has happened over the past year? Food prices have retreated from their highs. Why? • Global recession Will they go back to lower levels of three years ago soon? • Not for most commodities. Why? Population Issues Most of the world lives in developing countries and most population growth occurs there Rapid growth Positive and negative benefits of population growth Food-income-populationenvironment interacts U.S. agriculture – Developing country linkages Effects of U.S. agriculture on developing countries? • Helps keeps food prices down to the extent we export our surplus Effects of developing countries on U.S. agriculture? • Importer of many products • Competitor for some products How might China affect the U.S. economy and U.S. agriculture? Examples: • Buys U.S Treasury bonds which affects longterm U.S. interest rates • Export competitor for some farm products and importer of others • Its growing demand for fuel drives up prices • Large labor supply and open economy keeps price of labor down relative to capital What is economic development? Improved standard of living for the entire population • Income up, poverty down, reduced inequality Increased opportunities for individual choice and self esteem If development is good…… Why is it good? •Poverty and hunger down •Population growth rate down •Increased choice •Improves chances of global stability If development is good…… Why is there also pain with development? • Some industries shrink while others grow • Urban areas grow creating new challenges • Cultural disruptions • Environmental challenges can increase, at least in short run Is average per capita income a good measure of development? Why or why not? • Level of living and income highly correlated, but distributional element missing • Fails to capture changes in natural resource stock • Omits certain goods and services • Differences in cost of living Per Capita Income by Country Income distribution within countries In general, income is more unequally distributed in developing countries than in developed countries Income distribution tends to become more unequal as development proceeds up to $8000 GDP/capita, and then more equal Conclusion: distribution may affect ability of country to move from middle income to upper income country Why is the labor force in developing countries heavily in agriculture? People have to eat and if productivity low, must farm to feed themselves Provides employment Why does economic development require expansion of the nonagricultural sector? Capacity of agriculture to continue to employ everyone is limited People want to consume more than food and fiber as income grows Why is agricultural development particularly important to LDC’s? Provide food Free up resources such as labor Generate capital Create market demand Improve rural welfare Trade issues Why countries trade and why trade might be helpful to developing and developed countries Interrelationships among poverty, population, environment, and trade How macroeconomic and trade policies are interrelated Trade issues continued How developed country policies help or hurt developing countries (and vice versa) Effects of global trade agreements on agriculture in developing and developed countries Why capital movements have become as important as trade in goods and services Summary Still a great deal of poverty and hunger Hunger-poverty-populationenvironment interrelated Global economy with U.S. and developing country agriculture interlinked Development involves broad-based increase in standard of living Involves pain as non-ag sector grows relative to agriculture Growth in non-ag sector usually depends on growth in agriculture International markets (trade and capital movements) play a role