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3b Agricultural development and food security Overview Role of agriculture in development Implications of land scarcity The Green Revolution Growth and distributional impacts of the GR Food security and other discussion Importance of agricultural growth Ensure food supply and/or save foreign exchange Achieve food self-sufficiency in closed economies; in open economies, earn export revenues or save foreign exchange Generate labor surplus Potential rural-urban migrants to supply non-ag labor force Fiscal and financial surpluses Private savings from ag profits Public savings from ag taxation Demand ‘linkages’ Where purchasing power is sufficient, ag growth raises demand for output of other sectors Consequences of lack of agricultural growth SE Asian demographic transition: population growth rates around 3% in 1960s-70s Rising demand for food – and jobs Arable land is limited in supply: area per person falling Ag uses land and labor to produce food – so just use intensify labor use on existing land! But… Diminishing returns lower L productivity lower increases in food output falling real wages economic distress and political unrest Land is less equally distributed than income Gini coefficients for inequality of income and land ownership: E Asia and Pacific 1950s Income Land 0.45 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 0.35 0.34 0.34 0.35 0.47 0.49 0.50 0.41 Source: Deininger and Squire, J Devel Econ 1998 Note: Gini measures inequality: most equal = < G < = most unequal Ag stagnation with growing pop’n: w/pM Decline of ag output per capita will raise food prices and VMP of labor in agriculture - when measured in terms of industry price This will slow rate of transfer of L to industry, raising unit labor costs and reducing industrial profit rate and savings (diagram) – “Ricardian hell”: steady state with subsistence wage (due to dim returns) & zero net additions to capital stocks L supply (from ag.) Industrial L demand Labor in industry • Where will surpluses then be concentrated? Getting agriculture moving Get more effective land area: Expand at frontier where available (Thailand, parts of Indonesia outside Java) Irrigate suitable areas – double cropping Adopt land-saving technologies – raise yields per unit of land Green Revolution = package of land-saving technologies Increased food output prevented famine Raised labor productivity Lowered food prices raised real wages for urban workers Lowered relative value of land defused some political conflict What is needed for agricultural growth? If using traditional technology More inputs of land, labor Problem: shortage of land, in spite of irrigation investments If making a shift to new technology More capital (embodied in fertilizer, seeds, farming skills) Problems: capital shortages, research leads and lags, complementary inputs (rural credit) In SE Asia, 1960s-70s, land-abundant economies took 1st option; land-scarce economies took 2nd option Green Revolution in Asian rice International Rice Research Institute (Philippines) founded 1960 New rice plant types (1965 +) Developed by international researchers (technology transfer) More nitrogen-responsive (fertilizer-using) Non-photoperiod sensitive (non-seasonal, shorter growing season) Thus more output per unit of land planted GR largely solved problem of land scarcity in Asia from 1970s to 1990s 10 11 Yields rose fastest in land-scarce economies Growth rates (% per year) of rice output, area, & yield 1955-65 1965-87 Output Area Yield Output Area Yield Philippines 2.3 0.9 1.4 3.8 0.2 3.6 Indonesia 1.5 0.7 0.8 5.3 1.3 Thailand 6.7 2.8 3.9 2.5 0.5 (Philippines/Indonesia: land-scarce, net importers, Thailand: land-abundant, net exporter) In food-importing countries, early output growth relied equally on yield growth and area expansion In later years, growth in land-scarce economies came from yield gains alone 12 The green revolution in a Philippine village 13 14 Institutions matter! The case of Vietnam Issues constraining agricultural development in VN Access to modern inputs – such as new varieties of rice Access to markets, storage, and processing facilities Security of land tenure – investment incentives, credit access Restrictions on land use and farm consolidation Productivity in VN rice agriculture has risen during periods of rapid reform, and has slowed when pace of reform slowed down Improved terms of trade for ag have caused TFP growth And had indirect benefits – children in school (Haughton) Secure property rights associated with higher yields 15 16 Topics for discussion Distributional consequences of the GR Symbiosis: land reform is easier where GR gains largest Why? Ricardian process in reverse: effective land area increase makes it less scarce, raises labor productivity Purchasing power and food security: agricultural prices in general equilibrium Food self-sufficiency vs food security: economics or politics? Food prices are now rising again: time for a second Green Revolution? 17 Tomorrow: global shocks, local responses The oil price shocks and Indonesian development Theory review: non-traded goods and the real exchange rate (look at Corden and Neary article from Brad’s class) Dutch Disease Policies to address D.D Debt and development: the Philippine currency crisis Global shocks and macroeconomic imbalances Dealing with imbalances: accommodate or adjust? Review and Q&A 18 ... complementary inputs (rural credit) In SE Asia, 1960s-70s, land-abundant economies took 1st option; land-scarce economies took 2nd option Green Revolution in Asian rice International Rice Research... Indonesian development Theory review: non-traded goods and the real exchange rate (look at Corden and Neary article from Brad’s class) Dutch Disease Policies to address D.D Debt and development: ... equally distributed than income Gini coefficients for inequality of income and land ownership: E Asia and Pacific 1950s Income Land 0.45 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 0.35 0.34 0.34 0.35 0.47 0.49 0.50