Title: Introduction: Context and Motivation
1Introduction Context and Motivation
- Economics of Food Markets
- Lecture 1
- Alan Matthews
2Lecture objectives
- To introduce some of the issues dealt with in the
course - To give a sense of the very extensive government
intervention in and regulation of agricultural
and food markets. Course focuses on the
evaluation of these interventions. - To describe course requirements and expectations
of your involvement
3A new era for food markets agflation?
- Historical experience has been steady downward
trend in real price of food, food has never been
cheaper - Current dramatic food price increases
- Explanations?
- Demand growth in emerging economies
- Competition from biofuels
- Droughts and climate change
- Constraints on supply capacity
4Taken from Von Braun, IFPRI, 2005
5Wheat prices (US No 2 Hard Red Winter)
6Further reform of Europes agricultural policy
- No real reforms for 30 years, now three major
reforms since 1992 and discussions starting on a
fourth - Explanations?
- Declining economic importance and greater
differentiation in farm structures has weakened
power of the farm lobby - Environmentalist critique of the productivist
model of agriculture - Consumer concerns not with prices but with food
safety and market power - Development groups concern about impact of the
CAP on developing countries - Anti-globalisation food security critique
7Further reform of Europes agricultural policy
- The reform agenda
- 2008 CAP Health Check
- 2009 EU Budget Review
- 2010-2013 Negotiation of next Financial
Perspective - Implications of successful conclusion of Doha
Round - Implications of further EU enlargement (Western
Balkans, Turkey)
8Reviewing international trade rules
- Agriculture a stumbling block in the current Doha
Development Round of trade talks - Absence of international trade disciplines on
agricultural policies until the Uruguay Round
1994 - What type of trade rules are appropriate to allow
legitimate policy space to developed and
developing country governments while avoiding
negative spillovers on third countries?
9Agricultural exceptionalism
- Is agriculture different?
- Plenty of evidence that it is treated differently
- Very significant trade protection and support
- International trade rules different for
agriculture - Very prominent role in EU budget
- Different mechanisms for EU decision-making
10Agricultural exceptionalism
- Reasons for different treatment
- Economic characteristics of food markets
- Political and social importance of farm
communities - Food security concerns
- Agriculture as a provider of public goods
- Importance in land management, watershed
management - Agriculture as a driver of rural development
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12EU budget expenditure by heading(commitment
expenditures, EUR million)
Source Commission Financial Report 2006
13Source Commission Budget Review Consultation
Paper September 2007
14Paradigms in agricultural policy-making
- The dependent agriculture or state assistance
paradigm - The competitive agriculture paradigm
- The European Model of Agriculture of
multifunctional agriculture - The food fundamentalist paradigm
- Paradigms frame the objectives which guide
agricultural policy-making
15Agriculture in the Irish economy
Source Department of Agriculture and Food,
Annual Review and Outlook 2005-06
16Agriculture in the Irish economy
Source Department of Agriculture and Food,
Annual Review and Outlook 2005-06
17Food Markets
Factor markets Input markets
Farm product markets
Wholesale markets
Retail markets
18A corporate view of the global agri-food
business chain
Source Von Braun, J. The World Food Situation
An Overview, IFPRI, 2005
19Characteristics of food markets
- Primary commodity markets
- Competitive markets characterised by volatility,
declining terms of trade and weak bargaining
power of producers - Factor markets
- Missing markets (environment, agricultural
research), regulation of competing uses (land) - Input and food wholesale markets
- Concentrated markets, concerns about market power
- Food retail markets
- Changing consumer behaviour, asymmetry of
information, food safety, advertising - International trade markets
- Level playing field?, fair trade, global supply
chains
20The policy analysis perspective
- Food markets are heavily regulated for all kinds
of reasons - What objectives?
- What instruments?
- Is the intervention efficient?
- Is the intervention equitable?
- Tools of welfare/cost benefit analysis
21The Food Markets course
- Examines policy issues arising from the operation
of food and agricultural markets - Emphasises blend of institutional knowledge and
application of economic principles - Uses simple graphical analysis of markets as the
principal methodology - Addresses topical issues, e.g. WTO trade talks,
biofuels, CAP reform
22Food Markets outline
- Introduction and motivation
- Agricultural policy objectives why support
farming? - EU agricultural policy
- Economics of price support policies
- Rural development and biofuels policies
- Managing agricultures impact on the environment
- Regulating agricultural trade and WTO rules
- Impacts of agricultural trade liberalisation
- Market power in the food chain
- Food law and food safety
23Food Markets assessment
- Examination ( 70)
- Eight questions, answer four
- Two assessments (15 each)
- Tutorial classes
- Active learning, student presentations
- Contact and office hours
- Tuesdays 4-5 pm, Wednesdays 3-4 pm
- alan.matthews_at_tcd.ie
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26Food markets reading
- Wide reading expected
- Core readings for each topic
- Supplementary readings for those who intend to
specialise in the topic
27Hope you enjoy the course!