Rice Trade and Price Volatility: Implications on ASEAN and Global Food Security
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Focusing on Southeast Asia—home to the world’s largest rice exporters and importers—this paper examines trends in rice price and trade to determine whether trade causes volatility or the other way around.
This paper highlights the thinness of rice trade relative to wheat and maize, and the contrasting price volatility and tradability relations for wheat and maize, which display a positive correlation, and for rice, which show an inverse relation. The paper focuses on Southeast Asia, which hosts the world's biggest rice exporters and rice importers. Using the Granger causality tests to determine correlation, the analysis concludes that very low global trading activity in rice that tends to self-perpetuate its dampening effect on trade does not cause extreme rice price volatility in the region, but the other way around. Rice-importing countries appear to resort to self-sufficiency measures as insurance to compensate for the high risks of unreliable rice supply and unaffordable rice prices. What would it take for countries to regain their confidence in external rice trade? The Association of Southeast Asian Nations Integrated Food Security Program provides a menu of policies for reducing and managing the chances of excessive rice price volatility.
Contents
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Profile of Output and Trade in Selected Cereals
- Tradability and Price Volatility of Cereals
- Self-Perpetuating Cycle: Thin Trade in Rice
- Giving Trade a Chance through Regional Actions
- Conclusion
- References
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