Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production

Food prices spiked sharply in 2007–2008, in 2010–2011 and again in 2021–2022. However, the impacts of these spikes on poverty remain controversial; while food is a large expense for the poor, many poor people also earn income from producing or marketing food, and higher prices should incentivize gre...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Headey, Derek D., Hirvonen, Kalle
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139997
_version_ 1855533497596248064
author Headey, Derek D.
Hirvonen, Kalle
author_browse Headey, Derek D.
Hirvonen, Kalle
author_facet Headey, Derek D.
Hirvonen, Kalle
author_sort Headey, Derek D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Food prices spiked sharply in 2007–2008, in 2010–2011 and again in 2021–2022. However, the impacts of these spikes on poverty remain controversial; while food is a large expense for the poor, many poor people also earn income from producing or marketing food, and higher prices should incentivize greater food production. Short-run simulation models assume away production and wage adjustments, and probably underestimate food production by the poor. Here we analyse annual data on poverty rates, real food price changes and food production growth for 33 middle-income countries from 2000 to 2019 based on World Bank poverty measures. Panel regressions show that year-on-year increases in the real price of food predict reductions in the US$3.20-per-day poverty headcount, except in more urban or non-agrarian countries. A plausible explanation is that rising food prices stimulate short-run agricultural supply responses that induce increased demand for unskilled labour and increases in wages. Main
format Journal Article
id CGSpace139997
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Nature Publishing Group
publisherStr Nature Publishing Group
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1399972025-10-26T13:02:31Z Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production Headey, Derek D. Hirvonen, Kalle income food production food prices remuneration poverty reduction Food prices spiked sharply in 2007–2008, in 2010–2011 and again in 2021–2022. However, the impacts of these spikes on poverty remain controversial; while food is a large expense for the poor, many poor people also earn income from producing or marketing food, and higher prices should incentivize greater food production. Short-run simulation models assume away production and wage adjustments, and probably underestimate food production by the poor. Here we analyse annual data on poverty rates, real food price changes and food production growth for 33 middle-income countries from 2000 to 2019 based on World Bank poverty measures. Panel regressions show that year-on-year increases in the real price of food predict reductions in the US$3.20-per-day poverty headcount, except in more urban or non-agrarian countries. A plausible explanation is that rising food prices stimulate short-run agricultural supply responses that induce increased demand for unskilled labour and increases in wages. Main 2023-08-10 2024-03-14T12:08:48Z 2024-03-14T12:08:48Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139997 en Open Access Nature Publishing Group Headey, Derek D.; and Hirvonen, Kalle. 2023. Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production. Nature Food 4: 699-706. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-023-00816-8
spellingShingle income
food production
food prices
remuneration
poverty reduction
Headey, Derek D.
Hirvonen, Kalle
Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production
title Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production
title_full Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production
title_fullStr Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production
title_full_unstemmed Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production
title_short Higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production
title_sort higher food prices can reduce poverty and stimulate growth in food production
topic income
food production
food prices
remuneration
poverty reduction
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139997
work_keys_str_mv AT headeyderekd higherfoodpricescanreducepovertyandstimulategrowthinfoodproduction
AT hirvonenkalle higherfoodpricescanreducepovertyandstimulategrowthinfoodproduction