Government trade restrictions and international price volatility

Date

Authors

Anderson, Kym

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

National governments dislike food price volatility to varying extents. When some of them use trade measures to insulate their domestic market from international food price fluctuations, that volatility is amplified. This in turn prompts more countries to follow suit. However, when both food-exporting and food-importing countries so respond, each group becomes less capable of preventing domestic price volatility. This paper examines empirically the extent of insulation in both groups of countries, and also in high-income versus developing countries. It also provides an estimate of the contribution of such government actions to international food price spikes. A multilateral agreement to limit such government responses would reduce the need for all countries to so intervene, and allow more-efficient generic social protection policies to deal with the most vulnerable cases.

Description

Keywords

food price stabilization, domestic market insulation, trade-distorting measure

Citation

Source

Global Food Security 1. 2 (2012): 157–166

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until