Title: Animal Disease Outbreaks and Trade Bans
1Animal Disease Outbreaks and Trade Bans
- WTO Impacts on U.S. Farm Policy
- Southern Regional Trade Research Committee
(S1016) - World Trade Center
- New Orleans
- June 1-3, 2005
2- Dr. Thomas Marsh
- Associate Professor, School of Economic Sciences
- Fellow, IMPACT Center
- Washington State University
- Dr. Thomas Wahl
- Professor and Director, IMPACT Center
- Washington State University
- Tamizheniyan Suyambulingam
- PhD Student
- School of Economic Sciences
- Washington State University
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3Overview
- Provide background information/motivation
- Objectives
- Examine selected historical outbreak data
- Highlight selected WTO SPS policies
- Discuss a game theory model focusing on
- Disease outbreaks
- Trade bans
- Perceived risk
- Draw some implications
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4Background Information
- Animal diseases are public goods that impose
externalities on trade throughout the world. - Typically, trade bans are imposed on exports from
counties infected with a disease by importing
countries.
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5Background Information
- Even though the WTO agreements call for
scientific basis of trade barriers, imposing
trade bans are controversial, and costly - Moreover, re-establishing trade is relatively
difficult to achieve
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6Background Information
- Key concerns
- Importing countries impose trade sanctions based
on perceived risks rather than real risks. - WTO regulations are not disease specific, but
rather generically defined to accommodate a
myriad of animal and plant diseases. - WTO regulations are centrally planned schemes
that are rule-based and not market-based.
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7Objectives
- Review selected livestock outbreak data and
policies governing major animal disease outbreaks
across the world. - Conceptually assess the effectiveness of trade
bans as a mechanism to control these outbreaks.
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8Outbreak Information
- Focus on selected diseases
- Avian Influenza (AI)
- Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE)
- Classical Swine Fever (CSF)
- Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD)
- World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)
- Outbreak Data
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9Outbreak Information
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10Outbreak Information
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15Summary Outbreaks
- The data exhibit that temporal trends and
skewness are important characteristics of disease
outbreaks. - Disease outbreaks can be spatially concentrated
and clustered regionally around the world. - Economic impacts
- Outbreak costs are estimated to exceed billions
of US - Export losses alone due to the single BSE case in
2003 for the US range from US 3-4 billion
(Coffey et al. 2005)
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16WTO SPS Standards
- The apparent role of the WTO is to maximize
security against the international spread of
disease with a minimum interference to world
trade. - WTO regulations are rule-based schemes covering
risks to humans from diseases carried by animals,
plants and their products the entry or spread of
pests and additives, contaminants, toxins, and
disease-causing organisms in food and beverages.
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17Trade Ban Game
- Should a country impose a trade ban on imports
from another country in the event of an animal
disease outbreak?
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18Trade Ban Game
- Game theory model focusing on trade bans in the
event of disease outbreaks with perceived risk
(Bauch and Earn 2004) - Game theory is relevant in modeling
interdependent behavior in the presence of risks,
where risks faced by any one agent depend not
only on its choices but also on those of all
other.
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19Trade Ban Game
- Let P denote an individual countrys strategy to
ban trade and p be the proportion of other
countries instituting a trade ban (i.e., the ban
coverage level) - Pure strategies are
- P1 impose a ban with probability 1
- P0 not impose a trade ban.
- A mixed strategy arises if 0ltPlt1.
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20Trade Ban Game
- Expected payoff to country k facing perceived
morbidity risks rb (with a trade ban in place)
and ri (from infection with no trade ban) is - where is the probability that an
unprotected countrys livestock will be infected.
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21Trade Ban Game
- Intuitive outcomes are driven by thresholds
- Thresholds depend on
- Perceived risks (both subjective and objective)
- Disease specific attributes in
- Likely also perceived
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22Trade Ban Game
- Some implications
- Diseases have differing characteristics that
influence individual country strategies - FMD and CSF predominately have morbidity risk for
animals - AI and BSE have morbidity risk for animals and
humans - FMD, CSF, and AI are highly contagious
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23Trade Ban Game
- Some implications
- Temporal issues and patterns are important.
- AI has immediate risks for animals and humans
- BSE exhibits temporal patterns that are latent in
nature, having longer-term effects for animal and
human risks
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24Trade Ban Game
- Some implications
- Spatial issues and patterns of diseases are
important. - Assuming uninfected countries can be isolated
from infected regions of other countries, then
countries should implement a trade ban with some
nonzero probability. - Trade bans are likely to be ineffective and
remain sufficiently risky if there is unfettered
black market trade or livestock smuggling across
borders. - Effective border monitoring of adjacent
countries, border buffer zones, or regionalizing
the outbreak are essential for a trade ban to be
successful.
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25Summary
- Specific model outcomes are that
- Perceived information is critical to the
likelihood of a trade ban - Generic trade bans are not necessarily effective
nor efficient tools in the event of a trade ban
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26Summary
- General recommendations are that
- Because risks are often based on public
perception it is vital to have effective risk
communication strategies - Public policies should be mixed with innovative
market-based mechanisms and private incentives to
effectively control disease outbreaks.
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27Questions/Comments?
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