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Cornell University & Congressional Research Service Capstone Initiative, 2010-2011. Presentation to CRS Research Policy Council May 11, 2011. Professor Chris Barrett Students: Leah Bevis, Aurelie Harou, Sarah Pedersen, Luke Pryor, Marc Rockmore, Morgan Ruelle
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Cornell University & Congressional Research Service Capstone Initiative, 2010-2011 Presentation to CRS Research Policy Council May 11, 2011 Professor Chris Barrett Students: Leah Bevis, Aurelie Harou, Sarah Pedersen, Luke Pryor, Marc Rockmore, Morgan Ruelle Coordinated by Cynthia Mathys
Project Motivation U.S. Global Food Security Initiative: Policy Issues and Implementation Options USG has long record of dev’t assistance with a priority in improving food security worldwide for important strategic, economic and moral purposes. Highly current: 2007-8 food price crisis and 2011 record highs have sparked renewed interest due to political instability (Haiti, Madagascar), increased hunger and poverty, land grabs, etc. USG support for global food security is broadening beyond traditional foci: food aid, CRSPs, and support for int’l agricultural research. Goal of the capstone project: To provide background lit reviews, identify illustrative case studies, summarize policy implications of emerging issues related to the USG global food security initiative (Feed the Future), and US food aid programs.
Project Motivation • Four Priority Areas • Summarize fast changing research literature in areas where USG and private sector interest are increasingly turning: • Risk management, incl. index based risk transfer products • Increased recognition that uninsured risk is a major drag on economic growth and poverty reduction • Lots of innovation in commercial risk mgmt (IBRTPs) • Safety nets and social protection • - Much experimentation with new forms of safety nets • 3) Food aid quality • - Food aid as USG int’l safety net … quality a growing issue • 4) Smallholder market access • Rapid expansion of agrifood value chains in the developing world
Leah Bevis and Luke Pryor Risk in Developing Countries • Uninsured risk has major negative effects in developing world • Low-growth strategies are employed to lower risk exposure • Negative shocks often drive people into long-term poverty traps • Risk in the developing world comes in a variety of forms • Covariate risks experience by most people simultaneously • Droughts, wars, price swings, etc. • Idiosyncratic risks experienced by single people or households • Disease, deaths, or injuries, etc. • Agriculture is particularly susceptible to risk • Risk management in the developing world remains very limited • Community-based programs • Government-run programs • Market-based programs
Leah Bevis and Luke Pryor Market-Based Programs: Index-Based Risk Transfer Products (IBRTPs) • Traditional insurance is problematic in the developing world • E.g. High cost and slow (due to infrastructural problems) • One potential solution: IBRTPs • Different from traditional: • Pay-out based on area-level shocks, not individual losses • Solves some problems: • Low-cost, fast and no moral hazard/adverse selection • Comes with its own problems: • Basis risk (difference b/n insured and individual effects)
Leah Bevis and Luke Pryor Examples of IBRTPs • Micro Scale: Index-Based Livestock Insurance • ~2,000 participating herders in Northern Kenya • Protects against livestock death due to drought • Removes 25-40% of risk • Macro Scale: Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility • Protects against hurricanes and earthquakes • Sixteen member countries • Paid out $12.8 million in 2010 after Tropical Cyclone Tomas
Marc Rockmore and Morgan Ruelle Government-Based Programs: Safety Nets • Targeted transfers to poor or otherwise vulnerable households • Differ from other social protection: Non-contributory • Wide variety: village to national levels • Food Stamps (US); Progresa/Opportunidades (Mexico); National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (India) • Up to 25% of Mexican families and 52 million Indian families • Potential to reduce poverty and vulnerability • Direct transfers • Provide insurance in event of shock • After shocks: Reduce sales of vital assets • Pre-shock: Enable families to take risks on income generating activities • Induce socially desirable behavior • School attendance or nutrition
Marc Rockmore and Morgan Ruelle Safety Net Design • Transfer type: Cash, Near-Cash, In-Kind • Conditionality: Assistance is contingent on specific behavior(s): • Food Aid vs. Food for Work • Searching for employment, school attendance • Choice of program type • Group targeted • Administrative capacity
Sarah Pedersen International Safety Net: Food Aid Quality • Definitions: • Food Quality: food safety, nutritional values, sensory values (taste, smell, texture), convenience values (ease of cooking) • Food AID Quality: protecting the health and safety of beneficiaries; providing quality food at the right time, place, and amount; providing quality food at an acceptable cost that aligns with national regulations • Is food aid a nutrition intervention?
Sarah Pedersen Food Aid Quality • Objectives Matter: • Not all objectives are nutritional. Emergency programming aims to save lives by providing food to those in need. However, if nutritional objectives are neglected, recipients risk deteriorating health. • Tradeoffs exist between feeding the largest number of people and providing nutritionally balanced rations • Nutrient-dense foods cost more, but tackle hidden hunger (micronutrient deficiencies), and may better target vulnerable populations (pregnant/lactating women, infants/children, persons with HIV/AIDS) • Consider other metrics besides per-unit costs: cost per outcome achieved?
Sarah Pedersen Food Aid Quality • Increased opportunities for improved impact on recipients • Proliferation of food aid products & procurement and delivery mechanisms • Improvements in scientific understanding of human health and nutrition • Food safety • Due to a lack of uniform standards, safety of food aid remains inconsistent and not well regulated • No silver bullet • New USAID/Tufts Food Aid Quality Review points out that products, programs and processes all affect the impact of emergency food assistance on people in need
Aurelie Harou Smallholder Market Access • Increased attention to smallholder access • To reduce poverty & increase food security • Trends in the agrifood industry in least developed countries • Liberalization of trade and FDI in developing countries • Public sector demand for LRP for food aid programs • Growing demand by regulators and consumers for multidimensional sustainability labeling for food
Aurelie Harou Smallholder Market Access • Smallholder market participation decision • Crop-, firm-, and household-specific attributes • Most poor households (incl. farming households!) are net buyers of goods: adversely affected by higher food prices • Smallholder welfare impacts • Integration in modern marketing channels normally, but not always, helps participating farmers and farm workers • Reallocation of land for export crops can increase smallholders’ exposure to catastrophic risk
Aurelie Harou Smallholder Market Access • US Policy Implications • Food aid policies • Poor timing can result in higher price volatility • LRP can help smallholder access markets • Trade policies • Import tariffs and quotas • Nontariff trade barriers: food safety standards • Development and growth policies • - Smallholder market access enhanced by economic growth and poverty reduction, greater agricultural productivity, improved infrastructure and sociopolitical stability
Project Summary Outputs and Outcomes • This capstone project: • Will help CRS provide Congress with information about the range of policy tools available for addressing global food security. Four background papers to CRS. • Directly informed members and staff through two Congressional briefings and two policy briefs • Exposed talented students to CRS and to policy research and policymaking process within the Congress.
Project Summary • Global food security is high on policy agenda again: • Global food prices at record highs • G-20 has made food security a high priority • Farm Bill debates starting up • Pending foreign assistance reform legislation • Food Aid Convention renegotiation underway • The policy tools of the USG are evolving in response to a changing global food economy and heightened concerns about policies to address food security. It is essential for the Congress to be well informed.
Thank you Thank you for your time, interest and comments!