Agricultural Policy Indicators: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

Agricultural Policy Indicators:

Description:

changes and their impacts on the agricultural sector of ... Plant and animal health: sanitary and phytosanitary standards. Food safety: food born diseases ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:31
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: FAO386
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Agricultural Policy Indicators:


1
  • Agricultural Policy Indicators
  • Developing an approach to monitor policy
  • changes and their impacts on the agricultural
    sector of developing countries
  • Statistics, Knowledge and Policy
  • OECD World Forum on Key Indicators
  • Palermo 10-13 November 2004
  • Workshop on
  • Indicators to evaluate agricultural policies in
    OECD and non-OECD countries
  • Basic Foodstuffs Service
  • Commodities and Trade Division
  • FAO

2
Problem setting
  • No comprehensive information on policies
    affecting agricultural sectors of the developing
    countries is currently available

3
Why is such information needed?
  • First, to understand nature of and changes in
    policies affecting the agricultural sector for
    cross country and temporal comparisons
  • Then, to assess the impact of those changes on
    global and domestic commodity markets, and more
    importantly on food security of vulnerable
    population groups

4
But with a caveat
  • Indicators should provide useful indications of
    policy dimensions but not take the place of
    analysis of policy impact

5
With the ultimate objective of
  • providing developing countries with information
    that will be useful in improving their
    agricultural policies,
  • through measuring the effects of policies on the
    incentives of the actors and their ability to
    respond to those incentives

6
Structure of the Agricultural Policy Indicators
(API) project
7
Which policies?Structural Module
  • Labour market
  • wage rate training policies
  • Capital market
  • credit policies
  • Land market
  • property rights rental markets
  • Infrastructure
  • government investment in rural and institutional
    infrastructure
  • Marketing
  • policy towards marketing boards other agencies

8
Which policies? Macro Environment Module
  • Macroeconomic policies
  • Exchange rate policies, i.e. indirect effects of
    exchange rate disequilibrium
  • Trade policy environment
  • non-agricultural tariffs non-tariff measures
  • General price level price stability
  • Inflation, relative prices between farm and
    non-farm sectors, measures of price stability

9
Which policies? Research Deployment Module
  • Research
  • Government research government sponsored
    private research
  • Advisory services
  • i.e. extension and other services related to
    output levels and hectarage
  • Technology
  • Government policies toward uptake of new
    technology, including patents, other IPRs, plant
    breeders and farmers rights

10
Which policies? Regulatory Environment Module
  • Food quality
  • implementation of both product and processing
    standards
  • Plant and animal health
  • sanitary and phytosanitary standards
  • Food safety
  • food born diseases
  • Environmental
  • problems that influence and are caused by farm
    practices

11
Which policies? Commodity Market Module (CMM)
  • Output market policies
  • price support on internal market, direct payments
    tied to production etc.
  • Input market policies
  • input subsidies and taxes
  • Border policies
  • tariffs and non-tariff barriers, applied rates
    qualified by preferential access provisions (also
    for traded inputs)

12
The Commodity Market Module
  • CMM is the main module that will be developed
    first, eventually for most developing countries
  • the module will allow
  • develop quantitative policy indicators to monitor
    and evaluate agricultural policy developments for
    individual commodities
  • assess whether producers in developing countries
    are being subsidized or taxed
  • integrate the monitored indicators into
    quantitative/ comparative analyses of
    agricultural policies

13
The policy questions to be answered by the CMM
  • Output market policies
  • Question What incentives do producers get from
    the set of market price policies and the direct
    support they receive?
  • Input market policies
  • Question What is the impact of input market
    policies on producer incentives?
  • Border policies
  • Question How do border policies contribute to
    the level of incentives afforded by other price
    policies?

14
Information to be collected within the CMM
  • on production and marketing chains of the
    selected commodities
  • on production processes
  • on all policies currently employed through output
    inputs markets that affect production
    incentives
  • stock-taking of all government activities and
    expenditures in output and input markets

15
Information to be collected continued
  • Output markets
  • major commodities (mainly tradables) producer/
    wholesale/retail prices in major producing and
    consuming regions and border prices at major
    ports
  • costs of handling, storage and transportation for
    the bulk of farm commodities between major
    production, consumption and exit/entry centers
  • Input markets
  • retail prices at major production regions and
    exit/entry centers
  • costs of handling, storage and transportation

16
Information to be collected continued
  • Border measures
  • all tariffs, taxes, subsidies
  • TRQs, preferential access
  • non-tariff barriers
  • port charges and any other costs associated with
    the importation or exportation of the commodity
  • Direct payments
  • all direct payments applied to the commodity and
    related major inputs

17
Transforming the information into policy
indicators for impact analysis
18
Methodological Issues
  • Accounting for economy wide interventions
  • Structural Impediments and marketing Margins
  • Measuring government outlays
  • Public goods in the absence of pricing
  • Incidence of income transfers to agriculture
  • Commodity coverage

19
Methodological IssuesEconomy wide interventions
  • Various indicators, i.e. NRPs, ERPs, etc., do not
    capture effects of non-agricultural sector
    specific policies caused by
  • exchange rate misalignments (departure from
    equilibrium exchange rates)
  • trade policies affecting the non-agricultural
    sector
  • As a minimum, and where available, real exchange
    rate movements (price of tradables to
    non-tradables) be monitored
  • Where this is not possible, purchasing power
    parity exchange rate be monitored

20
Methodological Issues Structural impediments and
marketing margins
  • Distinguishing explicit trade and price policies
    from presence of structural impediments due to
  • poor physical and institutional structure
  • uncompetitive processing industry
  • high intermediate transaction costs due to
    erratic policy changes

21
Methodological IssuesMeasuring government outlays
  • List of budgetary outlays can be long
  • Data only available on sector level, not
    commodity level
  • Not all outlays are done by central governments
  • Estimates can vary depending on reporting
    government agency

22
Methodological IssuesIncidence of income
transfers to agriculture
  • Difficult to differentiate who really benefits
    from government outlays
  • Farmers, or
  • input suppliers, or
  • agro-processing industry, or
  • simply reflect the cost of excessive bureaucracy

23
Computational Issuesespecially related to ERPs
  • definition of non-tradables (Corden primary
    factor inputs, or Balassa traded inputs with
    zero level of nominal tariff)
  • possible substitution between traded inputs (only
    few empirical estimates of elasticities could
    bias results if input prices are more distorted
    than output prices)
  • degree of substitution between traded inputs and
    primary factors (non-traded inputs) how value
    added is estimated could change if there is
    substitution
  • interpretation of ERPs in terms ranking or
    relative scale of protection
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com