Evolution, Drivers and Impact of Commodity

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Evolution, Drivers and Impact of Commodity Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Implications forIndonesia Impact ofCommodity Prices: and Evolution, Drivers Boom, BustandUpAgain? A Trade Development Report Development A Trade THE WORLD BANK OFFICE JAKARTA Indonesia Stock Exchange Building, Tower II/12-13th Fl. Jl. Jend. Sudirman Kav. 52-53 Jakarta 12910 Tel: (6221) 5299-3000 Fax: (6221) 5299-3111 Printed in December 2010 Boom, Bust and Up Again? Evolution, Drivers and Impact of Commodity Prices: Implications for Indonesia is a product of staff of the World Bank. The fi ndings, interpretation and conclusion expressed herein do not necessarily refl ect the views of the Board of Executive Directors of the World Bank or the government they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denomination and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of the World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement of acceptance of such boundaries. Cover and chapters photos are: Copyright @ Brad Jackson for the left photo on the front cover and Chapter 7; Ross Jaax for the middle photo on the front cover and Annex page; Bappeda Gorontalo province for the right photo on the front cover and Chapter 6; Bastian Zaini for the top photo on the back cover, Chapter 2, Chapter 3, and Chapter 5; Hasbi Akhir for the left photo on the back cover, Chapter 1, and Chapter 3; Takiko Koyama for photos on Chapter 4 and Chapter 6; the photos in Chapter 6, Chapter 7, and right photo on the back cover are from the collection of World Bank Photo Library. All rights reserved. This report can be downloaded at http://go.worldbank.org/YY1OOD9UB0 and at www.worldbank.org/id/trade A Trade Development Report Boom, Bust and Up Again? Evolution, Drivers and Impact of Commodity Prices: Implications for Indonesia Table of Contents Acknowledgements ix Preface x Acronyms xiii Executive Summary 1 Summary of the Chapters 4 Chapter 1 Rising Food Prices: The Impact of Increased Production of Biofuels 17 1.1 Introduction 18 1.2 The rise in global food prices 19 1.3 Recent examinations of the contribution of increased biofuels production on increased food prices 20 1.4 Estimates of factors contributing to the rise in food commodities prices 22 1.5 Conclusion 32 Chapter 2 Pricking the Price Bubble to Avert a World Rice Crisis 35 2.1 Introduction 36 2.2 The nature of rice: Thin markets, quality segmentation, concentrated exports and politically sensitive 37 2.3 Factors that were not the key drivers of the 2008 price increases: Oil, biofuels, the US dollar, and shortfalls in production 39 2.4 Factors that were key drivers of the 2008 price increases: trade restrictions and buying behavior 42 2.5 Price scenarios: Stay high, escalate further or go down 44 2.6 Policy responses to prevent further escalation of the global rice crisis 46 2.7 Postscript: what happened next? 48 Chapter 3 Commodity Price Shocks and Market Integration in Indonesia 51 3.1 Introduction 52 3.2 Spatial integration of Indonesian commodity markets with the world 53 3.3 Integration among Indonesian provinces 58 3.4 Determinants of market integration 60 3.5 Commodity price volatility 66 3.6 Conclusions and policy implications 69 Chapter 4 Impact of Commodity Prices on Indonesia’s Economy 73 4.1 Introduction 74 4.2 The Wayang 2005 general equilibrium model 76 4.3 Results and discussion 80 4.4 Conclusion 88 Chapter 5 Managing Commodity Price Shocks in Indonesia 91 5.1 Introduction 92 5.2 Impact of high commodity prices and volatility: Exporters, consumers, producers and the Government 93 Boom, Bust and Up Again? ii Evolution, Drivers and Impact of Commodity Prices: Implications for Indonesia Table of Contents 5.3 Coping with commodity price shocks: The Indonesian experience 98 5.4 Recent international policy responses to commodity price increases and volatility 106 5.5 Policy recommendations for Indonesia 111 Chapter 6 Indonesia’s Growth and Exports Trends: Macro and Sectoral Perspective 117 6.1 Introduction 118 6.2 Indonesia’s growth: Long-term macro trends and engines of growth 118 6.3 Sub-national growth 123 6.4 Export performance and its drivers 126 6.5 Drivers of growth in Indonesia’s export performance since 1998 132 6.6 Implications for trade development strategy 140 6.7 Conclusion 141 Chapter 7 Making the Most of High Commodity Prices for Indonesia’s Development 143 7.1 Introduction 144 7.2 The importance of commodities in Indonesia’s economy 145 7.3 Commodity based development: Challenges and opportunities 147 7.4 Indonesia and increased commodity prices: Impacts and missed opportunities 150 7.5 The new global reality: High and volatile commodity prices 156 7.6 Indonesia: Having its cake and eating it too 158 7.7 Conclusion 176 Annexes 179 Annex I 179 Annex II 182 Annex III 205 Annex IV 226 Annex V 230 Annex VI 233 Annex VII 247 References 258 Boom, Bust and Up Again? Evolution, Drivers and Impact of Commodity Prices: Implications for Indonesia iii Table of Contents List of Figure Figure 1: Drivers of food price increases 5 Figure 1.1: International food prices 19 Figure 1.2: International food price sub-indices 20 Figure 1.3: Global maize use 25 Figure 1.4: Global vegetable oils use 25 Figure 1.5: EU oil seeds imports 26 Figure 1.6: US maize and soybean area 27 Figure 1.7: Wheat and oilseeds area 28 Figure 1.8: Wheat stocks, actual and simulated 28 Figure 1.9: Wheat prices vs. stocks 29 Figure 1.10: Impact of India’s ban on rice exports (Thai rice export prices, US$/ton) 29 Figure 1.11: Global grain consumption 30 Figure 1.12: Food prices vs. exchange rate 31 Figure 1.13: Wheat open interest and prices 32 Figure 2.1: Real rice prices, 1961-2008 37 Figure 2.2: Comparison of Thai and US rice export prices, 2005-08 38 Figure 2.3: World grain stock to use ratios 40 Figure 2.4: Commodity prices in current US$ (2003=100) 43 Figure 2.5: World market rice price, 2004-08 (Thai 100B export price) 45 Figure 2.6: Rice prices (Thai 100% B) and export restrictions 49 Figure 3.1: Evolution of world commodity prices 54 Figure 3.2: Adjustment to the shock in the world price of rice 58 Figure 3.3: Evolution of price dispersion 61 Figure 3.4: Contributions of remoteness and infrastructure to rice price diff erences 65 Figure 3.5: Rice price volatility: Indonesia and abroad 68 Figure 5.1: Exports increased with commodity boom 93 Figure 5.2: Indonesia almost doubled its foreign reserve assets 94 Figure 5.3: Infl ation rates, 2007-08 95 Figure 5.4: Eff ect of a 10 percent increase in rice price by income deciles 95 Figure 5.6: Indonesian Government bond yields appear to track the cost of subsidies 97 Figure 5.7: The impact of severe shocks on economic progress 97 Figure 5.8: Food outpaces general infl ation 98 Figure 5.9: Rising international prices of food 99 Figure 5.10: Except for rice, prices in Indonesia were aff ected by increases in international prices 99 Figure 5.11: Domestic price of cooking oil was stabilized following increase in export tax of CPO 102 Figure 5.12: Trade restrictions triggered panic in global rice market 103 Figure 5.13: Fuel subsidies benefi t the rich more than the poor 104 Figure 5.14: Energy subsidies are becoming unsustainable 104 Figure 5.15: The fuel price is set below its economic cost 105 Figure 5.16: Fuel prices in Indonesia are among the lowest in the region 105 Figure 5.17: Country experiences and concerns of social unrest 107 Boom, Bust and Up Again? iv Evolution, Drivers and Impact of Commodity Prices: Implications for Indonesia Table of Contents Figure 6.1: Indonesia’s GDP per capita 119 Figure 6.2: Indonesia’s annual GDP per capita growth 119 Figure 6.3: Indonesia’s growth in the past quarter century has come primarily from manufacturing and services 119 Figure 6.4: Contribution to GDP growth by sector-- weighted by sector’s share in value-added 121 Figure 6.5: Contribution to labor income growth by sector (weighted by sector’s labor intensity) 121 Figure 6.6: Labor intensity by sector 121 Figure 6.7: GDP per capita growth and labor intensity premium 122 Figure 6.8: Regional growth per capita and labor intensity premium, 2001-05 -- simple rates 124 Figure 6.9: Regional growth per capita and labor intensity premium, 2001-05-- population 2001-adjusted rate 124 Figure 6.10 : Sumatra growth per capita 2001-05 -- population 2001 adjusted rates 125 Figure 6.11: Java Bali growth per capita 2001-05 -- population 2001 adjusted rates 125 Figure 6.12: Kalimantan growth per capita 2001-05 --population 2001 adjusted rates 125 Figure 6.13: Sulawesi growth per capita 2001-05--population 2001-adjusted 125 Figure 6.14: Eastern growth per capita 2001-05---- population 2001-adjusted rates 125 Figure 6.15: Growth and output’s initial levels per region, 2001-05 126 Figure 6.16: Export growth by sector 127 Figure 6.17: Exports composition – long term changes 127 Figure 6.18: Manufacturing export growth 128 Figure 6.19: Manufacturing export intensity growth 128 Figure 6.20: Number of exported products – Only trade fl ows larger than US$100,000 129 Figure 6.21: Old stuff still dominates export growth 130 Figure 6.22: Relationship between export and subsequent growth 131 Figure 6.23: EXPY or income earning of export baskets 131 Figure 6.24: Comparing the evolution of exports sophistication – Indonesia vs.
Recommended publications
  • The Financial and Economic Crisis of 2008-2009 and Developing Countries
    THE FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC CRISIS OF 2008-2009 AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Edited by Sebastian Dullien Detlef J. Kotte Alejandro Márquez Jan Priewe UNITED NATIONS New York and Geneva, December 2010 ii Note Symbols of United Nations documents are composed of capital letters combined with figures. Mention of such a symbol indicates a reference to a United Nations document. The views expressed in this book are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the UNCTAD secretariat. The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Material in this publication may be freely quoted; acknowl edgement, however, is requested (including reference to the document number). It would be appreciated if a copy of the publication containing the quotation were sent to the Publications Assistant, Division on Globalization and Development Strategies, UNCTAD, Palais des Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10. UNCTAD/GDS/MDP/2010/1 UNITeD NatioNS PUblicatioN Sales No. e.11.II.D.11 ISbN 978-92-1-112818-5 Copyright © United Nations, 2010 All rights reserved THE FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC CRISIS O F 2008-2009 AND DEVELOPING COUN T RIES iii CONTENTS Abbreviations and acronyms ................................................................................xi About the authors
    [Show full text]
  • A Sticky-Price View of Hoarding ∗
    A Sticky-Price View of Hoarding ∗ Christopher Hansman Harrison Hong Aureo de Paula Imperial College London Columbia University University College London Vishal Singh New York University November 8, 2018 Abstract Governments worry that household hoarding of staple foods during times of high prices destabilizes com- modity markets. The conventional view has hoarding—due to consumer precaution or panic—amplifying supply shocks and creating shortages. Using U.S. store-scanner data during the 2008 Global Rice Crisis, we reject this narrative. Areas with rice-eating populations had more hoarding but no difference in store price dynamics or stockouts. We find support instead for a reverse-causal channel, whereby sticky store prices lead to hoarding. Anticipating higher prices, rice-eating households bought rice from slow-to-adjust stores that implicitly offered promotions. Policy implications differ across these two views. ∗This paper was previously circulated as "Hoard Behavior and Commodity Bubbles". We thank seminar participants at INSEAD, Aalto, Peking University, Warwick University, Cambridge University, NBER Universities Conference on Commodities, HKUST, New York University, PUC-Rio and Yale University for helpful comments. We are also grateful to Emi Nakamura, Hassan Afrousi, Michael Woodford, William Goetzmann, Hank Bessembinder, Manuel Arellano, Orazio Attanasio, Richard Blundell, Marcelo Fernandes, Bo Honoré, Guy Laroque, Valerie Lechene and Elie Tamer for useful conversations. de Paula gratefully acknowledges financial support from the European Research Council through Starting Grant 338187 and the Economic and Social Research Council through the ESRC Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice grant RES-589-28-0001. 1 Introduction Household hoarding of staple foods—defined as the accumulation of inventories during times of high prices—has long been a concern of governments, particularly in developing countries.
    [Show full text]
  • Food Reserves Working Paper #8 March 2019 Rice Reserves
    Food Reserves Working Paper #8 March 2019 Rice Reserves, Policies and Food Security: The Case of the Philippines Ramon L. Clarete Study funded by the European Commission, Directorate-General for Development and Cooperation, Unit C1 DAI Europe Ltd. 3rd Floor Block C Tel: +44 (0) 1442 202 400 Westside, Fax: +44 (0) 207 420 8601 London Road, www.dai-europe.com Apsley HP3 9TD United Kingdom About this working paper This working paper is one of the products of a study conducted by DAI at the request of the European Commission as part of the advisory service ASiST managed by the unit in charge of rural development, food security and nutrition (C1) within the Directorate General for International Cooperation and Development (DEVCO). The study has aimed at clarifying the potential role of food reserves in enhancing food and nutrition security in developing countries, and at making recommendations on how to use food reserves (in complement to other tools), taking into account the specificities on the context and the constraints of World Trade Organisation (WTO) disciplines. The study was conducted based on i) an extensive review of the existing literature (both theoretical and empirical) and ii) 10 case studies analysing national or regional experiences in Africa, Asia and South America. All the products of the study (including other working papers, a compilation of case study summaries, and a synthesis report) are available at: https://europa.eu/capacity4dev/hunger-foodsecurity-nutrition/discussions/how-can-food-reserves-best-enhance-food-and-nutrition- security-developing-countries. Acknowledgements Franck Galtier (CIRAD) coordinated the overall study.
    [Show full text]
  • Rice Price Controls Policy of Vietnam and Its Competition with Thailand: a Practical Application of Spatial Equilibrium Models
    RICE PRICE CONTROLS POLICY OF VIETNAM AND ITS COMPETITION WITH THAILAND: A PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF SPATIAL EQUILIBRIUM MODELS Dissertation for the Completion of the Academic Degree “Doctor Rerum Agriculturarum” (Dr. rer. agr.) Submitted to the Faculty of Agriculture and Horticulture at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin by Pham Thi Huong Diu, M.Sc. President of the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Prof. Dr. Jan-Hendrik Olbertz Dean of the Faculty of Agriculture and Horticulture Prof. Dr. Dr. h. c. Frank Ellmer Advisors: 1. Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Harald von Witzke 2. Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Bokelmann 3. Prof. Dr. Siegfried Bauer Date of Oral Exam: 19.03.2014 ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENT First of all, I would like to express my sincere gratitude to my supervisor, Prof. Dr. Dr. h. c. Harald von Witzke, for his strong support for my doctoral study and thesis. I would also like to thank him for being an open person to ideas, and for encouraging and helping me to shape my concerns and ideas. For all I have learned from him and for providing an office place where I have studied over 4 years. His attitude to research inspired me to continue to a doctoral program and more motivation in study. I would like to thank .Prof. Dr Tihman Brück for his guidance, encouragement and insightful comments. Although he has moved to work in another country, his supports are always valuable to me until the end. I also would like to thank Prof. Dr. rer. nat. habil. Wolfgang Bokelmann and Prof. Prof. Dr. Siegfried Bauer for reviewing my thesis with enthusiasms.
    [Show full text]
  • To Protect Agribusiness Profits Or the Right to Food? November 2009 Written by Molly D
    A Question of Governance: To Protect Agribusiness Profits or the Right to Food? November 2009 Written by Molly D. Anderson for the Agribusiness Action Initiatives (AAI). Co-Editors: Alexandra Spieldoch- IATP/AAI-North America and Myriam Vander Stichele – SOMO/AAI-Europe About AAI The Agribusiness Action Initiatives (AAI) is a growing international network of NGOs, activists, academic researchers, and food system experts from farm, labor, environment, consumer, church and civil society organizations. AAI is concerned by the market concentration of a hand- ful of transnational agro-food conglomerates and their inordinate power over our most basic life system: agriculture and food. To learn more about how AAI is challenging corporate concentration and power, please visit www.agribusinessaction.org About the Author Molly D. Anderson, PhD, Food Systems Integrity Dr. Anderson works on science and policy for more sustainable and democratic food systems with organizations working from the local to international scales. She was a Coordinating Lead Author on the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science & Technology for Development (North America/Europe sub-Global Report). A Question of Governance: To Protect Agribusiness Profits or the Right to Food? INTRODUCTION In November 2009, government delegates and representatives from multilateral organizations and civil society are meeting in Rome for the third international food summit to address rapidly rising numbers of hungry people (the “food crisis”) by coordinating and expanding
    [Show full text]
  • Interrelations Between Public Policies, Migration and Development in the Philippinesphilippines 41 2017 03 2017 1 P141 978-92-64-27227-9 for More Information
    OECD Development Pathways Interrelations between Public Policies, Migration and Development in the Philippines OECD Development Pathways Interrelations between Public Policies, OECD Development Pathways Migration and Development in the Philippines The OECD Development Pathways series helps developing and emerging economies to Interrelations between identify innovative policy solutions to their specifi c development challenges. Higher levels of well-being and more equitable and sustainable growth cannot be achieved by merely reproducing the experience of industrialised countries. For each of the countries studied, Public Policies, Migration the series proposes options for action in specifi c policy areas and at the broader strategic level. It identifi es the binding constraints to development across all sectors and proposes and Development in whole-of-government solutions. the Philippines Interrelations between Public Policies, Migration and Development in the Philippines is the result of a project carried out by the Scalabrini Migration Center (SMC) and the OECD Development Centre, in collaboration with the Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO) and with support from the European Union. The project aimed to provide policy makers with evidence on the way migration infl uences specifi c sectors – the labour market, agriculture, education and investment and fi nancial services – and, in turn, how sectoral policies affect migration. The report addresses three dimensions of the migration cycle that have become an important part of the country’s social and economic contexts: emigration, remittances and return. The results of the empirical work confi rm that even though migration contributes to the development of the Philippines, the potential of migration is not fully exploited. One explanation is that, despite its advancement in understanding the link between migration and development which is refl ected in the Philippine Development Plan, not all policy makers in the Philippines take migration suffi ciently into account in their respective policy areas.
    [Show full text]
  • Food in a Warming World the Changing Foods on the British Plate
    FOOD IN A WARMING WORLD THE CHANGING FOODS ON THE BRITISH PLATE Food in a warming world: - The changing foods on the British plate Executive Summary Our climate is changing at an alarming rate, with 2015, 2016 and 2017 confirmed as the three warmest years on record. The international Paris Agreement has been created to limit the greenhouse gas emissions that are causing climate change, and it recognises the breadth of activities that contribute emissions. The role of the food we eat has come into the spotlight in addressing climate change, and it is now evident how much we can all do to help global efforts by adapting our diets. This report takes the example of four iconic, classic UK dishes: chicken tikka masala, fish and chips, ploughman’s lunch, and cawl, Wales’ famous lamb stew. We consider where the ingredients come from and how much the different ingredients contribute to carbon footprint. For comparison, one example result shows that the emissions for the ingredients and preparation of one chicken tikka masala meal are equivalent to boiling a kettle 89 times to make a cup of tea. In doing so, we consider how the footprints of these meals compare to the ‘carbon budget’ we need to have adopted by 2030 to meet the Paris Agreement. But the climate and our food is a two-way street. We have identified twenty risks posed by climate change to our classic British dishes, some affecting food production overseas, while others emerging on home shores. Example impacts include lower yields for global commodities like rice and soybeans; heat stress disrupting livestock productivity; warmer, wetter conditions leading to pest invasions and proliferations; and water shortages threatening age-old production regions.
    [Show full text]
  • A Sticky-Price View of Hoarding ∗
    A Sticky-Price View of Hoarding ∗ Christopher Hansman Harrison Hong Imperial College London Columbia University Aureo de Paula Vishal Singh University College London New York University July 17, 2019 Abstract Household hoarding of staple foods during periods of scarcity is conventionally por- trayed as driven by precaution. By paying high prices for inventories to hedge price uncertainty, households are thought to destabilize commodity markets. However, re- tail prices are sticky, responding with delay to supply shocks. Hoarding hence con- flates precaution with anticipatory stockpiling due to sticky prices. With U.S. scanner data covering a classic 2008 rice hoarding episode, we find that household inventories anticipated delayed retail-price adjustment. There would be significantly less hoard- ing absent sticky prices. Traditional policy measures invoked during commodity- market bubbles or shortages can be counterproductive under the sticky-price view. ∗This paper subsumes our earlier work on hoarding and commodity bubbles. We thank seminar partic- ipants at CICF 2019, INSEAD, Aalto, Peking University, Warwick University, Cambridge University, NBER Universities Conference on Commodities, HKUST, New York University, PUC-Rio and Yale University for helpful comments. We are also grateful to Quisha Peng, Pengfei Wang, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Emi Naka- mura, Hassan Afrousi, Michael Woodford, William Goetzmann, Hank Bessembinder, Manuel Arellano, Orazio Attanasio, Richard Blundell, Marcelo Fernandes, Bo Honoré, Guy Laroque, Valerie Lechene and Elie Tamer for useful conversations. de Paula gratefully acknowledges financial support from the European Research Council through Starting Grant 338187 and the Economic and Social Research Council through the ESRC Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice grant RES-589-28-0001.
    [Show full text]
  • Memorial of the Marshall Islands | Annexes Volume I
    INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE OBLIGATIONS CONCERNING NEGOTIATIONS RELATING TO CESSATION OF THE NUCLEAR ARMS RACE AND TO NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT (Marshall Islands v. United Kingdom) ANNEXES TO MEMORIAL OF THE MARSHALL ISLANDS Volume 1 16 March 2015 ANNEXl ANNEX 1-Hansard, HL Deb, 28 October 1996, vol. 575, col. 134, http ://hansard. millbanksystems. corn/] ords/1996/oct/28/ address-in-reply -to-her­ majestvs-most ft >md li>!>~; >l!Îd !h:i!i !Jhuino ''""' !l>e !OII<il<l!ll>l: ,"il'i>.l!iil.fu'> lll:"'-,...ii!Ct l>f lh< ~nd of llm ~.! Mî~'è that >tlJI !» !lé tr'J~. f a!w l>i;Jl<>l> thot !Jkrl\lllim:l in<!~ il>ld l'f1l>!"'rllY llf~ il --~ nf oor OO!of!llW.Jlioo iu !mlp !<> <r<llf< a l""l<lg ®il pi!lle<Î'uiMWln!m·l:!u""""'-n ml!lli~ of reliltkmship> il>ld lM :a Slll:h U..y m;:rit OW"I'<f)l ~­ -.tk>n. l<'llf Çw:wrMy !Md>, 1 intil>ld Ill limit my Wllil!k.:l 1<> tiro lss!lè< <>ffootign afws il>ld ddeœe w!li<b ar~ d.,..!y !l!>ked ;in<! m whar wa< >aid !!y the ~Earl, l<lfd .!clf«:®. 'l'!l<y "'"Uw eliminatitm ofll!l<:l!;"' W""l"""' arn:! !h< <nlarg<mentafNATO. Durillg llm jlll>"t ye;tt l bat<' oc<'n" metll!!er of lM Omhm• Colllllll<Sioo on !h< Eliminari•m <>f Nudeor W<r.!pon<. establislred by lM pn:viou< Au,.,..alim Go"""""nt l>ut given lM ronlinood <Ujljl<lrt of linUr "'""'"'""'·Our mmdate w-,.m, ~devefup idea< and Pf"!"'S;ds fm • coo<rete am:! r.~ P"1'Wat!ll!le '" i<hil.w< • wmld tolally fret of !!OC!!;or wroporu;'" Wepr.senl<'d oorreport io dm Aas!r:ilim l'rime Mi!llita an !4th Aogust and his Gove!llllltnt pubiisl><d it oo tlml day.
    [Show full text]
  • Senate Hearings Before the Committee on Appropriations
    S. HRG. 110–98 Senate Hearings Before the Committee on Appropriations Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies Appropriations Fiscal Year 2008 110th CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION H.R. 3191/S. 1859 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Food and Drug Administration NONDEPARTMENTAL WITNESSES Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies Appropriations, 2008 (H.R. 3191/S. 1859) S. HRG. 110–98 AGRICULTURE, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION AND RELATED AGEN- CIES APPROPRIATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2008 HEARINGS BEFORE A SUBCOMMITTEE OF THE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED TENTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION ON H.R. 3191/S. 1859 AN ACT MAKING APPROPRIATIONS FOR AGRICULTURE, RURAL DEVEL- OPMENT, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, AND RELATED AGEN- CIES PROGRAMS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING SEPTEMBER 30, 2008, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES Department of Agriculture Department of Health and Human Services: Food and Drug Administration Nondepartmental witnesses Printed for the use of the Committee on Appropriations ( Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.gpoaccess.gov/congress/index.html U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 33–905 PDF WASHINGTON : 2007 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512–1800; DC area (202) 512–1800 Fax: (202) 512–2250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402–0001 COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS ROBERT C. BYRD, West Virginia, Chairman DANIEL K. INOUYE, Hawaii THAD COCHRAN, Mississippi PATRICK J. LEAHY, Vermont TED STEVENS, Alaska TOM HARKIN, Iowa ARLEN SPECTER, Pennsylvania BARBARA A. MIKULSKI, Maryland PETE V.
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 GRAIN and FEED ANNUAL Vietnam
    THIS REPORT CONTAINS ASSESSMENTS OF COMMODITY AND TRADE ISSUES MADE BY USDA STAFF AND NOT NECESSARILY STATEMENTS OF OFFICIAL U.S. GOVERNMENT POLICY Required Report - public distribution Date: 4/19/2016 GAIN Report Number: VM6024 Vietnam GRAIN AND FEED ANNUAL 2016 Approved By: Gerald Smith Prepared By: Quan Tran Report Highlights: Post estimates Vietnam’s wheat imports volume in the MY 2015/2016 at 2.60 million tons, an increase of about 300,000 tons compared to MY 2014/2015 imported volume. The use of feed wheat mainly contributed to the increase. Imported volume for MY 2016/2017 is forecast at 2.7 million tons. According to traders, the first volume of 86,000 tons of U.S. feed wheat (HS code 10019990) was shipped into Vietnam in MY 2014/2015 and another 68,000 tons was shipped during July-February MY 2015/2016. Adjusted corn imported volume in MY 2014/2015 is from 3.5 million tons to 4.9 million tons, mainly from South American source, due to the big drop of corn prices from this source that attracted vast imported volume. The import of corn volume in MY 2015/2016 is revised up from 3.0 to 7.3 million tons with the same reason. The Vietnam MY 2016/2017 corn import is forecasted at 6.0 million tons. Post estimates total rice production for MY 2015/2016 to reach 44.94 million tons of paddy rice, or approximately 28.09 million tons of milled rice equivalent. This is about 180,000 tons of paddy less than USDA’s official number for the same Marketing Year due mainly to the impact of drought weather caused by El Nino that resulted in lower production in the Spring crop in the Mekong River Delta.
    [Show full text]
  • A Sticky-Price View of Hoarding
    NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES A STICKY-PRICE VIEW OF HOARDING Christopher Hansman Harrison Hong Áureo de Paula Vishal Singh Working Paper 27051 http://www.nber.org/papers/w27051 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 April 2020, Revised September 2021 This paper subsumes our earlier work on hoarding and commodity bubbles. We thank seminar participants at CICF 2019, INSEAD, Aalto, Peking University, Warwick University, Cambridge University, NBER Universities Conference on Commodities, HKUST, New York University, PUC-Rio and Yale University for helpful comments. We are also grateful to Quisha Peng, Pengfei Wang, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Emi Nakamura, Hassan Afrousi, Michael Woodford, William Goetzmann, Hank Bessembinder, Manuel Arellano, Orazio Attanasio, Richard Blundell, Marcelo Fernandes, Bo Honoré, Guy Laroque, Valerie Lechene and Elie Tamer for useful conversations, and to Zhenhao Tan for excellent research assistance. de Paula acknowledges financial support from the European Research Council through Starting Grant 338187 and the Economic and Social Research Council through the ESRC Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice grant RES-589-28-0001. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer-reviewed or been subject to the review by the NBER Board of Directors that accompanies official NBER publications. © 2020 by Christopher Hansman, Harrison Hong, Áureo de Paula, and Vishal Singh. All rights reserved. Short sections of text, not to exceed two paragraphs, may be quoted without explicit permission provided that full credit, including © notice, is given to the source.
    [Show full text]