Agricultural globalization: is it good or bad for
developing economies?: discussion paper.
by Pardey, Philip G.
Globalization is a buzzword that means different things to
different people. To Diaz-Bonilla and Robinson (2001), for example, it
signifies expanded and more intensive international economic, political,
social and cultural linkages; a tendency to homogenize economic,
institutional, legal, political, and cultural practices; and an
emergence or exacerbation of international spillovers like global
warming, cross-border crime, and internationally transmitted diseases.
Although all these general notions have specific agricultural
implications, the three papers in this session zero in on the commodity
trade aspects of agriculture: a broad topic to be sure, but narrow by
common conceptions of "globalization."
At writing, the Doha round of global trade talks is on the
precipice. Important parties are still too far from any agreement on the
size of cuts in U.S. farm subsidies, the scope and magnitude of cuts in
EU farm tariffs, and the magnitude of reductions in the industrial
tariffs of large emerging economies to seal a deal. In addition, many
developing countries seek special and differential treatment for key
farm products that could also scuttle, or at least severely undermine,
the talks. At this eleventh hour (made especially sensitive and
complicated by the looming expiration of Presidential fast track
authority in the United States and a pending U.S. Farm Bill), there is
even a lack of agreement among the negotiating parties about the
relative economic consequences of elements of the negotiations.
The epitome of a timely, topical and extensively disseminated
study, Anderson and Martin's paper summarizes a large body of work
intended to inform directly the Doha deliberations. It succeeds
admirably, pointing to trade reforms in agriculture vs. the
nonagricultural merchandise sector as the dominant source of economic
benefit (especially to developing countries), and attributing the
lion's share of the gains to lowering tariffs (market access)
rather than eliminating production or export subsidies (domestic
support). Moreover, the overall and developing country gains are
severely curtailed if the extent of tariff reductions is scaled back
either in size or scope, largely because of large gaps between so-called
bound and actual rates of protection. The general equilibrium context in
which these results are couched is important, not least as gains from
agricultural reforms are likely to be realized in the context of
tradeoffs made in the merchandise sectors. Anderson and Martin's
results suggest that the world (and, especially, developing countries as
a group, but perhaps not certain developing countries within that group)
would be better served by greater access to agriculture
markets--particularly for rice, sugar, and meats, as these three
commodities account for half the estimated costs of protection--even if
these reforms came at the expense of increased access and subsidy
reductions in the merchandise sectors.
Koo and Kennedy's paper works its way through the tradeoffs
from eliminating export vs. production subsidies, and reports empirical
estimates of the local and rest-of-world consequences of removing
domestic subsidies in the U.S. corn sector. Their multi-market, partial
equilibrium model has the appeal of parsimony and transparency, but that
comes at the expense of assessing the magnitude and nature of the
cross-commodity and cross-sectoral tradeoffs that are integral to
achieving multilateral agreement on trade reforms. Anderson and Martin
point out the generally large gaps between existing subsidy commitments
and the levels of protection in practice. The United States has less
wiggle room than most in this regard, so a multi-lateral deal that
appeals to rest-of-world interests could well imply significant cuts in
U.S. farm subsidies. However, estimating the size and distribution of
the economic gains from shrinking farm subsides requires knowledge about
the degree to which farm programs affect (or are decoupled from) farm
production. There is serious debate about the magnitude and even the
direction of these effects. The production response to reforming
subsidies appears to be driven as much by changes in program rules as by
changes in the per unit or total size of the subsidy payment.
Carter and Gunning-Trant's examination of nontariff barriers
to trade, and specifically antidumping actions on the part of the U.S.
International Trade Commission against Chinese agricultural exports to
the United States, concluded that the disruptive effect of the import
duties levied was short lived. In some cases the restrictions were
relaxed, in others the Chinese began shipping "like" products
or, perhaps, routing the same product via third parties, and in other
cases the volume of Chinese exports to the United States recovered
despite being subject to import duty. In all cases, the antidumping
actions were triggered by a surge of imports from China to the United
States, the frequency of which could well increase going forward. In
2004, China's total agricultural output (valued at average world
prices) was roughly double that of the United States. In two-thirds of
the cases in a sample of 91 agricultural commodities, Chinese production
exceeded U.S. output--in fact producing more than double the output in
more than half the cases. In 1961, China produced more than the United
States for half of the sample of 91 commodities. If growth in Chinese
production continues to outpace U.S. agriculture, comparatively small
proportional increases in Chinese output (be they weather induced or
stemming from structural changes like technically induced productivity
increases) correspond to increases in output and, perhaps, trade flows
that are large, both absolutely and relative to U.S. production.
All three papers dealt with the effects of "one-shot"
trade reforms or retaliatory responses. No mention is made of some
important longer-term, structural shifts with potentially profound
effects on the magnitude, pattern, and gains from trade (although the
recursive dynamics of the LINKAGE model underlying Martin and
Anderson's results is intended to incorporate these effects).
Continued population growth and, especially, sustained growth in per
capita incomes via their domestic income elasticites of demand effects
will dramatically alter food consumption patterns globally, which in
turn have commodity mix, form (e.g., raw vs. processed vs. pre-prepared)
and mode-of-delivery plus trade consequences. As one manifestation of
these trends, the supermarket tsunami documented by Reardon et al.
(2003) sweeping Asia and Latin America has regional and global
implications for agriculture, not least as food wholesalers and
retailers begin sourcing with assurance of delivery times and quality as
well as cost in mind.
Classical Ricardian notions of comparative advantages rooted in
relative differences in production technologies may also be changing as
seismic shifts in the pattern of investments in agricultural R&D
reveal themselves in a realignment of the technological capacities of
countries. Pardey et al. (2006) see the world dividing into a small
group of "scientific haves" and a large (and growing) group of
"scientific have-nots.'" If recent agricultural R&D
trends continue unabated, the technological consequences for
productivity, global trade, and economic development generally, plus the
well being of poor people in poor countries in particular, will swamp
the magnitude and distribution of the gains realized from the current
round of trade reforms.
References
Diaz-Bonilla, E., and S. Robinson. 2001. "Introduction."
Brief number 1 in Shaping Globalization for Poverty Alleviation and Food
Security. International Food Policy Research Institute, IFPRI 2020 Focus
8, 2001.
Pardey, P.G., N.M. Beintema, S. Dehmer, and S. Wood. 2006.
Agricultural Research: A Growing Global Divide? IFPRI Food Policy
Report. Washington DC: International Food Policy Research Institute.
Reardon, T., C.P. Timmer, C.B. Barrett, and J. Berdegue. 2003.
"The Rise of Supermarkets in Africa, Asia, and Latin America."
American Journal of Agricultural Economics 85(5):1140-46.
Philip G. Pardey is a professor in the Department of Applied
Economics and Director of the International Science and Technology
Practice and Policy (InSTePP) center, at the University of Minnesota.
This article was presented in a principal paper session at the AAEA
annual meeting (Long Beach, CA. July 2006). The articles in these
sessions are not subjected to the journal's standard refereeing
process.
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