Welfare Effects of Policy-Induced Rising Food Prices on Farm Households in Nigeria

Type Conference Paper - AGRODEP 2014 Annual Meeting
Title Welfare Effects of Policy-Induced Rising Food Prices on Farm Households in Nigeria
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
City Minneapolis
Country/State Minnesota
URL http://www.agrodep.org/sites/default/files/AGRODEPWP0010_0.pdf
Abstract
Domestic policies in Nigeria have been linked to high, volatile, and rising food prices in the country. In
light of these linkages, this paper empirically examines the transmission of key monetary policy variables
to domestic food prices and the resulting welfare impacts. Estimates of policy-induced price changes from
estimated cointegrating relations between commodity prices and policy variables as well as demand
elasticities from estimated quadratic almost ideal demand system (QUAIDS) of households’ consumption
expenditures, were employed to estimate the welfare impact (compensating variation) of the policy-induced
price changes. The study found that government management of exchange rates and money supplies as well
as withdrawal of subsidies on petroleum products have been the main driver of rising food prices in the
country. While the average farm household benefited from these price increases, with the mean (median)
compensating variation estimated -7.8% (-0.2%) of the household budget, a sizeable proportion (44.1 –
55.5%) of the households suffered welfare losses from various policy induced price changes. These include,
notably households of smallholders (14.3 – 84.2%) and female-headed households (34.1 – 62.8%). Overall,
while domestic policy actions relating to money supply and subsidy removal were Kaldor–Hicks efficient,
exchange rate devaluation was not.

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