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OECD Reviews of Agricultural Policies in Brazil, China, and South Africa. Olga Melyukhina Directorate for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries. Pretoria, 19 April 2006. Agricultural Policy Reviews: Why Brazil, China, and South Africa?. OECD desire to “help” after Cancun Lead countries for G20
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OECD Reviews of Agricultural Policies in Brazil, China, and South Africa Olga Melyukhina Directorate for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries Pretoria, 19 April 2006
Agricultural Policy Reviews:Why Brazil, China, and South Africa? • OECD desire to “help” after Cancun • Lead countries for G20 • Major markets; major competitors • Interest of target countries • Important economic reforms
Pressures for reforms (1980s and 1990s) • Macroeconomic crisis • Brazil and South Africa: foreign and domestic debt burden, BoT deficit, high inflation • China: overall economic inefficiency • Political changes • Brazil: military regime replaced by elected government • China: change in communist leadership • Soth Africa: end of apartheid, democratic elections, lift of international economic embargo
Overall economic reform • Change of development paradigm • from self-sufficiency and import substitution, to economy opening and export-led growth • Economic liberalisation • broad and swift in Brazil and Soth Africa; gradual in China • deregulation of domestic markets and prices • trade liberalisation • privatisation • Depreciation of the local currency followed by tight fiscal and monetary policies
Agricultural policy reform • Deregulation of domestic markets and prices for agricultural commodities • radical in Brazil and SA; gradual in China • Opening of agricultural markets • cuts in import tariffs; • elimination/limitation of STEs; • progress in regional and international trade integration • Reduction and/or refocusing of budgetary support
Institutional changes • Land and structural reforms • Brazil: Land Reform Plans and National Programme for the Strengthening of Family Agriculture (PRONAF) • China: Household Production Responsibility System; explosion of Township and Village Enterprises • South Africa: Land Reform Programme and Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment for Agriculture (AgriBEE)
How have levels of support evolved?PSE in % of Gross Farm Receipts EU OECD USA Australia S Africa Brazil New Zealand China Source: OECD
What is the composition of support?Shares in overall PSE, 2000-03 Source: OECD
What is the cost of total support? TSE as % of GDP 2000-03 average Source: OECD
Agriculture contributed to and benefited from reforms GAO growth between 1989 and 2003 Source: FAO
Sources of agricultural growth Agricultural growth driven by: • Expansion of domestic and external demand • Macroeconomic stabilisation and economic opening And based on: • Land productivity improvements • Shifts in production structure consistent with comparative advantage • China and South Africa: labour-intensive horticulture and livestock • Brazil: soybeans, sugar-cane, and livestock
Brazil China S.Africa 1993 2003 Agricultural Trade Expanded Source: Comtrade
Rural poverty incidence fell,but remains high, as does inequality 1991 2000 1990 2000 2000 1993 Sources: Brazil – Income survey (PNAD); China and South Africa – WB.
Future benefits from multilateral reform • Analysis based on OECD GTAPEM • standard GTAP model • with improved representation of: • land allocation between alternative uses • trade and domestic policy interventions in OECD and the Quad • Scenario: 50% reduction of tariffs in all countries and sectors and ag. subsidies in OECD and some non-OECD countries
Source of reform Ag OECD 4% Ag Non-OECD 3% OECD 76% Non-OECD 24% Non-Ag OECD 16% Non-Ag Non-OECD 1% Distribution of welfare gains Source: GTAPEM
3 373 Sources of Welfare Gains (Losses) in Brazil, China and South Africa Source: GTAPEM
Distribution of gains across households:Brazil, China, and South Africa • Analysis based on same liberalization scenario, household level data • Gains are widespread across households • Poverty incidence falls • Effects are small relative to current welfare • Percentage gains are the largest for ...
… commercial farmers andagricultural employees in Brazil % Change in household welfare Source: OECD
… African households in South Africa % Change in household welfare Source: OECD
… and poorest households in general in China % Change in household welfare Source: OECD
Welfare gains from agricultural reforms in OECD countries% of total non-OECD gains
… and richest in India(but application limited to two States) % Change in household welfare Source: OECD
What did we learn on distribution impacts of liberalization? • No clear pattern of distributional impact • generally pro-poor in China and South Africa; ambiguous in Brazil; • ...and mixed impact on inequality • reduced inequality in China and South Africa; broadly neutral in Brazil; • Reforming/non-reforming inevitably imposes cost on some of the poor • Safety nets and adjustment assistance, rather than exemptions from trade commitments or delayed reform
Policy Challenges: Sustaining Agricultural Growth Focus on: • Rural infrastructure • Land and labour mobility • Terms & availability of credit • Tax policies • Environmental sustainability (water availability and quality) • Access to overseas markets
Policy Challenges: Reducing Social Divisions Growth necessary but not sufficient: • Social policies • Integration of small-scale farming into markets • Rural economy diversification • Enhanced labour mobility • Investments in human capital: health, education, and extension
Tentative Conclusions • Reform is possible • Macro-economic stability is important • Farmers respond swiftly to market forces • Reform enhances agricultural growth • Ag. growth reduces poverty – but not enough • Infrastructure improvement is decisive • Human capital improvement is crucial • Non-ag. policies are important drivers • OECD reform is necessary, but not sufficient