A study of supply response of jute in Bangladesh
Abstract
Jute has a historical prominence in the economy of Bangladesh.
It is the second most important crop after rice and the main cash crop
of the farmers. About 90 per cent of the population of Bangladesh living
in rural areas are directly or indirectly dependent on agriculture. Out
of 9 million rural families the fate of 5 to 6 million families, mostly
small cultivators and rural labourers, is directly associated with jute.
Some 50 thousand people are engaged in various phases of jute trade.
Jute processing and manufacturing is the largest industry of Bangladesh
giving employment to almost one half of the industrial labour force and
contributes one third of the industrial value added. About 85 per cent
of the export earning of Bangladesh comes from jute and jute-goods exports.
Thus future development of Bangladesh, and a considerable number of rural
poor people at large, depend, largely, on the future of jute. Moreover,
Bangladesh is the World's largest supplier of jute contributing more than
30 per cent of the world production and 40 per cent of the world's exports.
So the world jute industry is dependent to a significant extent on what
happens in Bangladesh. Jute faced a major market penetration by
synthetic substitutes starting from the mid-sixties and is facing
difficulty to compete with synthetic fiber. Attempts are being made at
national and international levels to improve the competitive position of
jute and maintain its production at desired levels following different
policies. For such policy analysis, the necessity of an empirical knowledge
of the supply responsives of jute farmers in Bangladesh is established. Under the recent conditions of increased productivity of rice, which
directly competes with jute land and other resources, and falling prices
due to competition from synthetics, an up to date study is attempted here
to estimate the short-run and long-run elasticities of the supply of jute.
A secondary objective of the study has been to use the results
obtained from the supply responsiveness study to analyse the causes of income
instability of jute farmers in Bangladesh. A survey of the previous
studies on jute supply response in Bangladesh is made indicating the
major deficiencies in inadequate specification of models in terms of
appropriate price variables and types of lags and the treatment of the
statistical problems involved.
A discussion of the theoretical issues in conceptualization and
estimation of supply response is followed by a statistical analysis of
aggregate acreage response to price changes over the period 1947-48 to
1977-78. Considering the jute situation in Bangladesh, a geometrically
declining distributed lag model,the Nerlovian adaptive expectations model,is
postulated and estimated. A number of statistical problems associated with
the estimation of adaptive expectations model are discussed while evaluating
the model. Following the notion that assumption of lags both in price
expectations and acreage adjustment, conforms more to the reality, the more
general model (partial adjustment and adaptive expectations model) is
attempted to estimate but is ultimately rejected because its estimate produced
unreal roots for the coefficients of adjustment and expectations
The short-run acreage elasticity of supply of jute with respect
to relative price of jute in terms of paddy price is found to be between
0.4 to 0.5 and the long-run elasticity almost double that. In the analysis of income instability to growers, use of some
recently suggested methodology is made. Variation in price is found to
account for more than 80 per cent of the variation around the long term
trend for jute income. The price of rice is also found to fluctuate
widely. This leads to the conclusion that a jute price stabilisation
along with a rice price stabilisation scheme could reduce the fluctuations
in jute income to the growers. It is found that a major source of price
fluctuation is probably the stochastic fluctuation in supply of jute,
which suggests the buffer stock scheme to be a plausible measure for
stabilizing the jute economy.
Finally, a summary of the observations made and conclusions
drawn in the study is made with a discussion of limitations and suggestions
for further research.
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