Title: Design of Systems Approaches to Invasive Pest Risk Management
1Design of Systems Approaches to Invasive Pest
Risk Management
- Everett B. Peterson (Virginia Tech)
- David Orden (IFPRI)
- Suzanne Thornsbury (Michigan State)
- Eduardo Romano (PIRE)
- Presentation made at 2004 PRESIM Workshop,
Washington, DC, August 19 20, 2004
2Project Overview
- Goal To develop and test an evaluation
methodology for regulations that adopt a systems
approach to reducing invasive pest risks
associated with imports that is less
trade-restrictive than a product ban. - Will develop several case studies to evaluate the
proposed methodology - Avocado imports from Mexico
- Citrus imports from Argentina
- Current status
- Have completed economic assessment of removing
geographic and seasonal import restrictions on
avocado imports from Mexico - Begun work on developing decision tree to
evaluate alternative systems
3Background on Avocados
- Importation of fresh Hass avocados from Mexico
into the U.S. have been totally or partially
banned since 1914 - Since 1997, avocados from approved orchards in
State of Michoacán, Mexico have been allowed to
be imported during specific time periods to
specific regions - In 1997, access to 19 Northeastern states plus
D.C. during November to February - In 2001, access to additional 12 states during
October 15 April 15 - Currently, there is a proposed to remove all
geographic and seasonal restrictions
4Domestic Production and Imports of Hass Avocados
600
500
400
Million lbs
300
Mexico
200
Chile
100
California
0
97/98
98/99
99/00
00/01
01/02
02/03
Marketing Year
5Model
- Static, partial equilibrium model
- 3 supply regions US (California), Chile, Mexico
- 3 domestic demand regions currently approved
states, avocado producing states (California,
Florida, and Hawaii), all other states - 2 time periods October 15 April 15, April 16
October 14 - Consumer demand for avocados
- Derived from weakly separable nested CES utility
function for representative consumer in each
region - Two substitution parameters
- Between avocados and all other goods
- Between avocados from each supply region
- Avocado supply
- CET revenue function determines supply in each
time period - Linear supply of an aggregate factor (determines
location of ppf) - Export supply of avocados from Mexico assumed to
be perfectly elastic
6Data and Key Parameter Values
- Baseline data is average of 2001/2002 and
2002/2003 marketing years - Demand elasticities
- SR Californian producer-level own-price -0.62
(Carman and Kraft), aggregate avocado -0.60 - LR 1.75 times SR elasticities
- Supply elasticities
- SR 0.35 (Romano)
- LR 1.3 (Carman and Kraft)
- Chile Adjust above total supply elasticities to
reflect export supply - Long-run population and income growth
- Assumed 10 growth in real income for all demand
regions - Population growth varied from 3.5 to 9 across
demand regions
7Preference Parameters
- To calibrate the CES utility function, must
choose a set of preference parameters. - For example, consider one-level CES
- For time periods and geographic regions with
import restrictions in place, the preference
parameter for Mexican avocados will equal zero in
initial equilibrium. - Removal of seasonal and geographic restrictions
require adjustments in preference parameters - Following Veneables, equate parameter value for
Mexican and Chilean avocados - Maintain slight preference bias for Californian
avocados
8Results
Base Short-Run Long-Run
Variable
(Million lbs) Percent Change Percent Change
California Avocado Production 346.0 -12.2 -14.6
Mexican Exports 58.2 259.6 485.1
Chilean Exports 176.8 -16.5 -9.3
California Producer Price
October - April 0.87 -36.8 -17.2
April - October 1.10 -32.7 -8.2
Producer Surplus Millions Millions
California -114.4 -35.9
Chile -24.4 -3.9
Equivalent Variation 184.4 116.2
Net US Welfare Change 70.0 80.3
9Future Work
- Avocado case
- Incorporate APHIS risk assessment and the
economic analysis (similar to work by Glauber and
Narrod) - Determine the costs alternative systems to
controlling avocado pests - Assess costs and benefits of alternative systems
(including alternative geographic restrictions) - Decision tree
- Continue to develop a generic framework for
analyzing different system approaches - Develop additional cases