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Predicting food price volatility

by IRIN | IRIN
Wednesday, 6 July 2011 14:34 GMT

* Any views expressed in this article are those of the author and not of Thomson Reuters Foundation.

JOHANNESBURG, 6 July 2011 (IRIN) - A new tool for measuring food price volatility in global agriculture markets could help poor countries or aid agencies like the World Food Programme (WFP) decide where and when to buy staples, says Maximo Torero, director of the US-based International Food Policy Research Institute�s (IFPRI) Markets, Trade and Institutions Division. The early warning tool, NEXQ (Non-parametric Extreme Quantile Model) has been developed by IFPRI and is based on sophisticated economic modelling, which provides daily price variability ratings for four major crops - hard wheat, soft wheat, maize (corn) and soya beans - and aims to help analysts predict price volatility. The model uses daily cereal price data going back to 1970 to calculate whether, or to what extent, prices have moved from their expected normal price. �What the tool does is [it] provides updates if we are in a period of excessive volatility based on global future prices which will be transmitted to developing countries in the following days or even weeks,� explained Torero. Homi Kharas, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, writes in an opinion piece [ http://www.brookings.edu/opinions/2011/0303_food_prices_kharas.aspx ] that it is price volatility or �the rapid and unpredictable changes in food prices that wreak havoc on markets, politics and social stability, rather than long-term structural trends in food prices that we can prepare for and adjust to. �And it is also worth noting that volatility cuts both ways - prices go up and down. The only reason food prices are going up so much this year [2011] is because they came down so fast after reaching 2008 peaks. Both rapid increases and rapid declines in food prices can create problems.� NEXQ should help policymakers and others working to improve food security �make better informed decisions, including whether or when to release stocks from emergency grain reserves,� said Torero. The tool was developed to support two of the recommendations in the Action Plan on Food Price Volatility and Agriculture made by G20 agriculture ministers on 23 June in Paris, he added. One of the decisions of the G20 ministers [ http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=93064 ] was to set up the Agriculture Market Information System (AMIS) to get agri-food markets to share data and improve food intelligence. NEXQ will feed into AMIS, Torero said. The G20 ministers also offered to support a pilot programme for a targeted emergency humanitarian food reserve system. A feasibility study, which will also consider which countries might be eligible for the proposed reserve, will be conducted by WFP and partners in September 2011. Global trigger mechanism NEXQ will support the management of the proposed reserve, said Torero, by providing a consistent global trigger mechanism for periods of extreme price variability. This should help managers of the reserve analyse the most vulnerable countries and develop country-level contingency plans. "Financialization" [ http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=90626 ] of the futures markets, along with poor market transparency, insufficient information about investors, unexpected changes triggered by national food security situations, panic buying and hoarding - have been listed among the root causes of harmful, rapid food price hikes. But the Brookings Institution�s Kharas points out that volatility is �inherent in the food market place� which causes speculation, �not the other way around.� "Speculators make money out of understanding and providing insurance against volatility. They do not create the volatility themselves, except under very strange conditions." Oil price link Among the solutions he lists, is breaking the link between food and oil prices. �The current global food system worked well in a world of cheap, stable energy prices which allowed food to be grown in concentrated locations and transported over huge distances to meet demand. That system will continue to give us volatility as long as oil prices remain volatile. �I would not bet on a return to cheap, stable oil prices in the near term, so the answer must be to change the food system to adapt to the new economics of energy. That probably means more localized and more diversified production and consumption, less use of fertilizer, and less wastage [20 percent of all food gets spoiled in storage and transport today]. Ironically, the organic, slow-food, go-local cooperative movement may find that market forces are their new best friend.� jk/cb IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org
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