1 / 27

Les systèmes de fixation du prix d’achat du coton-graine en Afrique

Les systèmes de fixation du prix d’achat du coton-graine en Afrique à l’épreuve de la volatilité. Gérald Estur 11 èmes Journées de l’A.C.A . Lomé , Togo, 21 mars 2013. Sommaire. Panorama des modes de fixation des prix Contraintes et défis Principes et objectifs

zalman
Download Presentation

Les systèmes de fixation du prix d’achat du coton-graine en Afrique

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Les systèmes de fixation du prix d’achat du coton-graine en Afrique à l’épreuve de la volatilité GéraldEstur 11èmesJournées de l’A.C.A. Lomé, Togo, 21 mars 2013

  2. Sommaire • Panorama des modes de fixation des prix • Contraintes et défis • Principes et objectifs • Forces et faiblesses • Conclusions et recommandations

  3. Pricing Systems • Producer price are directly or indirectly linked to international cotton prices in most countries. • Producers sell lint in countries where cotton is harvested mechanically. • Producers sell seed cotton in countries where cotton is handpicked. • Cotton prices and/or revenues benefit from some form of direct or indirect support/subsidy in almost all producing countries.

  4. Pricing Mechanisms • Market price or administered? • Price set by: government, ginners, cotton board / interprofession, producers? officially homologated ? • Negotiated or calculated? • Pricing formula taking into account ginner costs? producer costs? • Producer price based on percentage of world price? • Price set: before planting, before marketing, at purchase, pluri-annually? • Indicative or minimum guaranteed price?

  5. Pricing Mechanisms • Pan-territorial (national, region, ginnery)? • Price set at: farm gate, collection point, ginnery gate? • Quality differentials? • Pan-seasonal? Fixed or revisable (during or at the end of marketing season)? • Price paid cash or after delivery? Advance payment? • Price support or stabilization fund?

  6. Pricing Mechanisms • Price-setting mechanisms in Africa depend on the cotton sector structure, and mainly on the degree of competition between ginners. • Ginners must have secure supply of seed cotton to be able to guarantee producer price prior to plantings (marketing monopoly, concessions, contract farming). • In competitive sectors, producers are more exposed to market price fluctuations.

  7. Pricing Mechanisms • WCA countries: Pan-seasonal, pan-territorial minimum guaranteed pre-planting price based on price projections. Producer price is a percentage of international price. Final price based on actual average price (in countries with price support fund). Higher price risk for ginners. • ESA countries: Price fixed before marketing based on international price projection minus costs. Increased price risk for producers, and more fluctuations in production.

  8. Impact of Volatility • ESA Countries • WCA Countries

  9. Pricing Systems • Fixed pre-planting price: Benin, Chad, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal • Pre-planting price + eventual top-up payment at the end of season: Togo, Ghana • Price support fund: Mali • Price smoothing fund: Burkina Faso , Cameroon • Marketing floor price based on formula: Kenya (before planting), Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe • No formula: Ethiopia, Nigeria, Zambia

  10. Constraints and Challenges International cotton prices are extremely volatile!

  11. Daily Prices –2010/2011 Crop Cotlook A Index (US cents per pound CFR Far East) Source : Cotton Outlook

  12. Daily Prices – 2011/2012 Crop Cotlook A Index (US cents per lb CFR Far East) Source : Cotton Outlook

  13. Daily Prices - 2012/2013 Crop Cotlook A Index (US cts per lb CFR Far East) Source: Cotton Outlook

  14. Cotton Price Projections are not Reliable Cotlook A Index season average forecast in Avril (US cents per pound) Sources: ICAC, Cotton Outlook

  15. No Perfect Reference for Cotton Prices • Cotlook A Index based on quotations from merchants not on actual prices of sales to spinners. • Cotlook A Index has become less relevant for prices of lint sold by ginners to merchants. • ICE cotton futures market is not perfectly correlated with international cotton prices for physical cotton (“basis” fluctuations). • There is no price reference for cotton seeds as they are not traded internationally.

  16. Basis Fluctuations Cotlook A Index minus NY nearby futures (US cents per lb) Sources: Cotton Outlook & ICE Futures U.S.

  17. Constraints and Challenges • Exchange rate are volatile (production costs in local currency while lint is sold in dollars). • Estimates of production costs always contentious as they vary from one stakeholder to the other, and from one season to the next. • The share of the reference price that can be allocated  to farmers is highly dependent on the world price and on the level of  production.

  18. Exchange Rates are Volatile and Unpredictable CFA/USD Source: ECB

  19. Which Reference Price is Right? Cotlook A Index equivalent in CFA/kg FOB Source: ECB

  20. Constraints and Challenges • Ginnersneedscottongrowers more thangrowersneedginners: farmers have a choicebetweencrops, whereas a ginnerywithoutcottonisworthless. • “Competition is important to ensuring efficiency and equitable sharing of benefits between farmers and ginners. Yet, too much competition makes it difficult or impossible to engage in the coordination needed to provide important services such as quality control, input credit, research, and extension.” (World Bank study).

  21. The Issue of Productivity • Price is only one component of producer’s revenues. • Low productivity translates into lower producer prices. • Ginning outturn is a key factor.

  22. The Issue of Quality Cotton price depends on: • Fiber properties (“fiber”) • Contamination (“only fiber”) • Reputation (“more than just fiber”): cotton trade is based on the principle of the “sanctity of contracts”. African cotton is discounted due to the perceived risks of contamination, despite the fact that hand-picked cotton produces better lint.

  23. Objectives of Pricing Systems • Contribute to improving performance and competitiveness of the cotton sector. • Increase transparency to build trust and foster cooperation between stakeholders. • Mitigate risks of intra-seasonal price volatility. • Reduce inter-seasonal price volatility.

  24. Principles of Pricing Systems • Fair allocation of revenues and risks between producers and ginners. • Producer price determined on the basis of the operating costs of efficient ginners, otherwise ginners’ inefficiencies would be passed on to producers. • Domestic lint competitive with price and quality of imported lint.

  25. Price-setting Best Practices • Simple and transparent formula: producer price calculated as a fixed percentage of lint and seeds sales, based on easily accessible and verifiable references. • Flexibility within the season, allowing for adaption to volatile world prices: price to be revised periodically. • Minimum support price.

  26. Conclusions • No perfect price-setting mechanism. • Pricing mechanisms based on averages cannot cope with high volatility. • Need to have consensus between producers and ginners. • Seedcotton price must be linked to world price of lint. • Seedcotton price is just one component of producers’ revenues: increasing productivity of producers and ginners stands out as the top priority for improving the competitiveness and profitability of cotton production in Africa.

  27. Merci pour votre attention !

More Related