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Consequences of a food security strategy for welfare, income distribution and land degradation: the Philippine case. Ian Coxhead University of Wisconsin-Madison. Overview. Food policy and trade policy Models of trade policy and the environment The APEX model of the Philippine economy
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Consequences of a food security strategy for welfare, income distribution and land degradation: the Philippine case Ian Coxhead University of Wisconsin-Madison
Overview • Food policy and trade policy • Models of trade policy and the environment • The APEX model of the Philippine economy • Policy and technical change simulations • Environmental and welfare consequences
Food policy and trade policy • Under GATT/WTO, higher relative protection for ag. in some LDCs • Philippines: state grain trade monopoly (NFA) until mid-’90s • Targets: grain self-sufficiency and defense of price bands • Instruments: international trade QRs and domestic marketing • Rising NPR for corn from 1970s
Trade policy and the environment • Trade policy measures alter net ag. land demand and its allocation to crops • Indirect environmental impact when land degradation rates are crop-specific • Endog. price responses to a shock condition land demand outcomes • Food policy may dampen price responses
Partial equilibrium effects of a price support scheme S S’ D* p* D q* q q’
Land degradation and economic welfare in general equilibrium • “Effective” land endowment for 2 crops: • Derived demand for land: • Aggregate budget constraint: • “Weak disposal” assumes a = 0, so environmental damages not counted.
Welfare with food policy and land degradation • Comp. statics of a price increase: • Net government grain purchases • Welfare with food policy and land degradation: • Closures: fix pdand solve DG, or vice versa
The APEX model of the Philippines economy • Designed for ag.policy experiments • Highly disaggregated by sector, subsector and region • Uses econometrically estimated response parameters • Extended to include crop-specific land degradation rates for upland crops
APEX closures • “Unrestricted”: grain import tariffs, but no QRs and no domestic market interventions • “NFA”: QRs fix grain trade at base levels, and NFA buys/sells grain to fix nominal consumer price • Other features: balanced trade and gov’t budget (adjustment through changes in h’hold expenditures)
APEX experiments • Expt. 1: Increase in farm gate support price (NFA closure) • Expt. 2: Technical progress in corn production (unrestricted closure) • Expt. 3: Technical progress in corn production (NFA closure)
Conclusions • Food security is a desirable goal, but self-sufficiency and price-fixing policies may have welfare and environmental ‘surprises’ • Investments in technical progress have high social rates of return when env. benefits are included; Philippine food policies diminish these
Conclusions • QRs and domestic price-fixing have little effect on producer prices or income distribution, are costly in welfare terms, and may promote ag. land degradation • Design of food, trade and environmental policies should be integrated to minimize unwanted ‘surprises’
For further information... • APEX model and simulation results in full: www.aae.wisc.edu/coxhead/apex/apex.htm • Questions & comments to:coxhead@facstaff.wisc.edu