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25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions being proposed to deal with price volatility.” Tobias Takavarasha, NEPAD Agency
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25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

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Page 1: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

25th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP

Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30th

November 2011.

“Actions being proposed to deal

with price volatility.” Tobias Takavarasha, NEPAD Agency

Page 2: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Structure of Presentation

Introduction: Based on FAO-NPCA Joint efforts in assessing continental impacts

I. Staple food price levels and volatilities in Africa

II. Policy responses and actionsIII. The challenges and the optionsIV.Conclusions

Page 3: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

I. Staple food price levels and volatilities in Africa

Prices of staple grains have become more volatile in Africa

High prices not easily translated to better margins for producers due to high marketing and transport costs

High marketing costs are due to poor roads, uncompetitive rates and controls

Page 4: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Staple food price levels and volatilities ...

Staple grain prices have spiked two or three times in the last five or six years In 2008/09, major spikes in Benin,

Cameroon and Ethiopia In 2010/11, major price spiked in Cameroon,

Benin, Kenya, Mozambique, Ethiopia In 2010, price declined sharply in Ethiopia

and Kenya Prices in Cameroon have remained very

high since 2008

Page 5: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Staple food price levels and volatilities ...

Page 6: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Staple food price levels and volatilities ...

Prices have become more volatile Price volatility is higher in Africa than in Asia

or Latin America (based on sample countries)

Price volatility has become more serious in recent years (Table below)

Page 7: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Staple food price levels and volatilities ...

Maize Rice Wheat

Africa 305 791 548

Asia 295 463 371

Latin America 498 906 811

Average prices (in USD per ton) are also high in Africa when compared to the low per capita income of the continent

Maize Rice Wheat

Africa 9.60 5.73 5.65Asia (excludingExporting countries 5.52 4.56 5.17

Latin America 7.44 4.57 4.84

Average price volatility measured as standard deviation of log difference (real local currency 2005- 2011) – based on sample countries (only 2 countries for maize in Asia)

Page 8: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Staple food price levels and volatilities ...

High and volatile prices have negative consequences at micro levels for household and firm/ farm decisions as well as at macro levels for macroeconomic stability.

food is typically a large share of the total household expenditure for the poor

food price inflation major cause of overall inflation Volatile prices discourage investment by famers,

traders, millers & other operators along the value chain

food price instability slows down economic growth and the structural transformation that is the pathway out of rural poverty.

Page 9: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Staple food price levels and volatilities ...

Some preliminary observation about volatility and price levels in Africa

Relatively more import dependent countries generally have lower price volatility but higher price levels

Relatively self-sufficient countries have higher price volatility but lower price levels

Price volatility is lower in countries with high levels of stocks (stocks as a share of total supply)

Stocks are important in stabilizing prices

Page 10: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Staple food price levels and volatilities ...

Price volatility is higher in countries sharing borders with politically unstable country

The political problems in Zimbabwe appears to have contributed to price instability in the region - Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia

The problems in DRC and South Sudan has affected prices in Uganda, Rwanda and to some extent in Kenya

The neighborhood effect – price volatility is transmitted among neighboring countries.

Effective policies required to address the problem

Page 11: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

II. Policy responses 2007/08 - 2011

1. Policy decisions in favor of consumers

1.1 General or country wide support measure

i. Suspension/ reduction VAT and other taxes - bring down domestic prices

e.g. Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Uganda, Burkina Faso, Senegal, Niger

ii. Administrative price control or restrict private trade

iii. e.g Mali, Senegal, Malawi, Swaziland, Ethiopiaiii. Reduction of tariffs and customs fees on imports

Most countries including Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Togo, Zimbabwe

Page 12: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Policy responses ...

iv. Restricted or banned export – increase domestic supply

e.g. Ethiopia, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Malwi, Senegal, Tanzania. Togo, Zambia

1.2 Targeted consumer support -Safety net (increased or introduced)

i. Food or cash assistance Benin, Burkina Faso, Kenya (Hunger

Safety Net Program), Ethiopia (Productive Safety Net Program), Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Madagascar, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Togo

Page 13: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Policy response ...ii. Emergency food reserve

e.g. Ethiopia, Kenya, Benin, Ghana Cape Verde, Niger, Senegal, Togo

2. Producer support measures2.1. Production Support Programmes

i. General (country-wide) support (fertiliser, seeds, etc) Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania

ii. Productive safety net (targeted input subsidy)

Kenya, Malawi, Ghana, Malawi, Nigeria

2.2 Market based support Rwanda (Minimal price for rice producers), Kenya

(Warehouse receipt system), Ethiopia (commodity exchange)

Page 14: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

III. The challenges and the options Food import may not be an option for most

African countries – several reasons Foreign exchange is a major constraint

Average annual food trade deficit (export minus import) increased:

from about 1.5 billion in 1968-83 to 11.3 billion in 1994- 07 in Africa.

Food import capacity is very low – Average share of food import in total export is greater

than 15% in most countries A country is said to be food secure if its food import

share is less than 8.8% of total export (IFPRI study)

Domestic prices can also be high if a country is dependent on food import

Page 15: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

Tab 4.6- Averaged Food trade balance (thousand dollars)

Regions Trade Balance

1968-83 1984-93 1994-07

Eastern Africa 249329 -295287 -1338831

Middle Africa -120957 -579594 -1251724

Northern Africa -2536057 -5336774 -7949740

Southern Africa 824036 390447 327818

Western Africa 97025 -50409 -1091088

Total Africa -1486623 -5871618 -11303565

Page 16: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

The challenges and options ... Continental, regional and national

approaches to prevent food price volatility must be based on:

Enhancing domestic production Ensuring political stability and security – collective

effort of all neighboring countries required Promoting regional trade – RECs

Maize without borders - COMESA Increasing public and private investment in stocks

– regional, national and community levels Institutionalizing social safety net Developing capacity for risk analysis and

management

Page 17: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

The challenges and the options ... CAADP provides an effective option

in dealing with high and volatile prices The pillars which are comprehensive The CAADP compact and areas of focus Mainstreaming risk management,

smart subsidies and employment in investment plans, food reserves, bio-energy policies

The regional CAADP compact to facilitate regional integration

Page 18: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

The challenges and the options…..

The NEPAD Rural Futures Programo Focuses on rural transformation and

rural developmento Employment creation including

youtho Backward and forward linkages and

rural marketing infrastructureo Flagship projects with rapid impact.

Page 19: 25 th Brussels Briefing on Food Price Volatility: Implications for ACP Countries. European Economic and Social Center, Brussels: 30 th November 2011. Actions.

IV. Conclusion

Need to accelerate implementation of programs to improve productivity, reduce costs of production, create employment and reduce risk associated with agricultural production; introduce safety nets, smart subsidies in the short term, and encourage private sector investment in African agriculture.

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THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!