Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan

Secondary crops are of increasing interest to policymakers and planners in developing countries because of a desire to diversify economic activities and because of their proven potential to raise farm incomes and rural employment. To assess this potential, basic information on the demand characteris...

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Main Authors: Bouis, Howarth E., Scott, Gregory J.
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157090
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author Bouis, Howarth E.
Scott, Gregory J.
author_browse Bouis, Howarth E.
Scott, Gregory J.
author_facet Bouis, Howarth E.
Scott, Gregory J.
author_sort Bouis, Howarth E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Secondary crops are of increasing interest to policymakers and planners in developing countries because of a desire to diversify economic activities and because of their proven potential to raise farm incomes and rural employment. To assess this potential, basic information on the demand characteristics for these crops is required. But, given the large number of possible crops to be studied, policy analysts require an estimation procedure that is less data-intensive and time-intensive than standard econometric estimation procedures. In this paper, a relatively new, low-cost procedure, based on demand for food characteristics, is applied, illustrating its usefulness for analysis of demand for potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan. In Asia, the potato should not be regarded as a starchy staple whose consumption declines as income increases, but rather as a food with a positive income elasticity. Due to the high calorie cost of potatoes relative to wheat and rice, potatoes are often valued primarily for the variety they contribute to the diet and their taste, rather than for the calories they provide. This means that demand for potatoes should increase with income in the future. However, expansion of demand for potatoes as an alternative food staple is conditional upon the cost per calorie for potatoes approaching that for wheat and rice. Results from Bangladesh for more recent years show that with the rise in potato production, relative prices for potatoes versus wheat fell and per capita consumption of potatoes increased considerably. These findings are consistent with demand parameters generated utilizing the new estimation procedure.
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spelling CGSpace1570902025-11-06T05:28:41Z Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan Bouis, Howarth E. Scott, Gregory J. economics methodology potatoes economic aspects crop diversification price stabilization Secondary crops are of increasing interest to policymakers and planners in developing countries because of a desire to diversify economic activities and because of their proven potential to raise farm incomes and rural employment. To assess this potential, basic information on the demand characteristics for these crops is required. But, given the large number of possible crops to be studied, policy analysts require an estimation procedure that is less data-intensive and time-intensive than standard econometric estimation procedures. In this paper, a relatively new, low-cost procedure, based on demand for food characteristics, is applied, illustrating its usefulness for analysis of demand for potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan. In Asia, the potato should not be regarded as a starchy staple whose consumption declines as income increases, but rather as a food with a positive income elasticity. Due to the high calorie cost of potatoes relative to wheat and rice, potatoes are often valued primarily for the variety they contribute to the diet and their taste, rather than for the calories they provide. This means that demand for potatoes should increase with income in the future. However, expansion of demand for potatoes as an alternative food staple is conditional upon the cost per calorie for potatoes approaching that for wheat and rice. Results from Bangladesh for more recent years show that with the rise in potato production, relative prices for potatoes versus wheat fell and per capita consumption of potatoes increased considerably. These findings are consistent with demand parameters generated utilizing the new estimation procedure. 1996 2024-10-24T12:47:16Z 2024-10-24T12:47:16Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157090 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Bouis, Howarth E.; Scott, Gregory J. 1996. Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan. FCND Discussion Paper 14. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157090
spellingShingle economics
methodology
potatoes
economic aspects
crop diversification
price stabilization
Bouis, Howarth E.
Scott, Gregory J.
Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan
title Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan
title_full Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan
title_fullStr Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan
title_short Demand for high-value secondary crops in developing countries: the case of potatoes in Bangladesh and Pakistan
title_sort demand for high value secondary crops in developing countries the case of potatoes in bangladesh and pakistan
topic economics
methodology
potatoes
economic aspects
crop diversification
price stabilization
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157090
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AT scottgregoryj demandforhighvaluesecondarycropsindevelopingcountriesthecaseofpotatoesinbangladeshandpakistan