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Feeding
Frenzy
The long-term prospects for world food
supplies are once again the subject of international debate. A model of
the global economy illustrates some scenarios to the year 2005.
The past year has seen a dramatic rise in
international grain prices and a fall in world grain stocks to
near-record low levels. Together with projections by the Worldwatch
Institute of massive grain imports by China in the next century, these
developments raise again the perennial question of whether the world
will be able to feed itself in the future.
A particularly critical issue is whether
the rapid industrialization of densely populated East Asia will lead to
hunger in poorer countries? China alone, with 22% of the world's
population but only 7% of its land area, is expected to need to import
half of its grain requirements by 2030. That would represent a doubling
of current world grain trade. And what if India's economic reforms were
to have similar consequences?
Such questions are not unlike those that
concerned Thomas Malthus and, more recently, the Club of Rome.
Malthusians make good headlines, but they continue to be proved
spectacularly wrong. The clearest indicators of that at present are the
overall availability of food and its relative price in international
markets. Today's 5.7 billion people have 18% more food per person than
the 3 billion people alive three decades ago. And if the global demand
for food had grown faster than supplies, real food prices would have
risen over time: in fact they have fallen slightly.
According to the The World Bank, the
price of food relative to industrial products has fallen by an average
of 0.5% a year since 1900. The Bank expects the same rate of decline
over the next ten years as food supply growth continues to outstrip
demand. But such projections incorporate many assumptions about future
developments in the world economy: what happens under plausible
alternative scenarios? That is the question addressed in a recent CEPR
Discussion Paper by Kym Anderson, Betina Dimarana, Thomas Hertel and
Will Martin.
These researchers construct a model of
the world economy for the next dcade and test what might happen under
various scenarios to 2005. In their base scenario, the Uruguay Round is
not fully implemented: this leads to a continuation of the slight
decline in world food prices.
In the study's first alternative
scenario, the Uruguay Round is fully implemented by 2005 as scheduled.
Contrary to some earlier studies and the fears of many food-importing
developing countries, the simulations suggest that this will have almost
no impact on real international food prices. They are projected to be
only 2-4% higher, an imperceptible rise compared with the usual
year-to-year fluctuations in food prices and foreign exchange rates.
There are two reasons for this small
effect. First, the agricultural commitments in the Uruguay Round by the
most farm-protectionist countries are far more modest than was
originally expected. Second, many markets for non-farm products will
also be liberalized under the Uruguay Round. As a result, their prices
too will rise in international markets, moderating the increase in farm
relative to non-farm prices. Clearly, it is relative prices that are
important.
This scenario assumes China, and hence
Taiwan, remain outside the WTO. What difference would their accession
make? A lot, according to the simulations and supposing the following
con fulfilled: China opens up to to the extent of its 1995 offer to WT0
members (which was rejected as insufficient at the time); Taiwan cut its
industrial tariffs by 36% and its support for farm products by half that
amount; and the industrialized countries offer China and Taiwan the same
access to textile and clothing markets as if China had been a GATT
member in 1994.
Under these assumptions, China's WTO
accession adds very considerably to the Uruguay Round results:
international grain price rises would be twice as large, and livestock
product prices would be 40% higher; China would import 4% instead of
just 1% of its grain needs by 2005; aggregate world trade would be 13%
instead of just 10% greater; and the gain in global welfare would be
boosted by almost a third as much again.
What is more, these results ignore
important dynamic effects of reform, notably the inducement to domestic
and foreign investments that would accompany trade liberalization.
Should those investments boost China's industrial productivity so that
its economy grows 25% faster, the gains from Chinese accession could be
as much as four times greater. At the same time, China's independence on
grain imports would increase by about twice as much.
There is, of course, a risk that the
industrialized countries will not deliver all their promised reforms to
textile and clothing markets. That risk will be considerably larger if
and when China joins the WTO, given China's huge potential to expand its
textile and clothing exports. Should there be such backsliding, a great
deal of the projected gains from the Uruguay Round and China's accession
would evaporate, Asian industrialization would slow, and the growth in
their demand for food imports (and hence the rise in world food prices)
would be less.
While net food exporters such as North
America and Australasia would be harmed by such a slowdown in Asia's
food import demand, might it not be welcome news for poorer
food-importing countries in Africa and elsewhere? Anderson and his
colleagues think not. They argue that the dampening of world food prices
would be a symptom of slower reform and hence a slower growing world
economy. That would inhibit development everywhere, including in Africa.
Contrast this with the key reason for the
downward trend in world food prices of past decades: the very rapid
growth in farm productivity. According to these researchers that
productivity growth has been due in large part to well-targeted
investments in international agricultural research by aid agencies, the
economic returns from which have been, and continue to be, extremely
high.
The very success of those research
investments, however, has bred complacency. One consequence is that the
emphasis on agriculture by aid agencies has waned considerably in the
past decade. should that cause global grain productivity growth to slow
by, say, one-fifth during the next decade, Anderson and his colleagues
predict potentially dramatic effects: by 2005, international grain
prices would be more than 5% higher, and global economic welfare wouId
be $28 billion less per year.
These results suggest that in the wake of
the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization's recent summit in
Rome, world leaders ought not to worry about the effects of Asia's rapid
industrialization on food markets. Instead, they should focus on the
need for revitalizing investment in agricultural research in developing
countries. That may be the single best way of simultaneously reducing
malnutrition and providing new technologies for sustainable development.
This article reviews research reported in
'Asia-Pacificic Food Markets and Trade in 2005: A Global Economy-wide
Perspective', CEPR Discussion Paper No. 1474 (September 1996), by Kym
Anderson, Betina Dimarana, Tomas Hertel and Will Martin. Anderson
is Professor of Economics at the University of Adelaide and a Research
Fellow in CEPR's International Trade programme; Dimarana and Hertel are
at Purdue University; and Martin is at the World Bank. |