William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

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Policy Response to Challenges in Agriculture and Rural Development in the Europe and Central Asia Region: Sharing Experience and Enhancing Cooperation in the Region William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI University of Missouri Twenty-Seventh FAO Regional Conference for Europe Yerevan, Armenia 13 May 20

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Policy Response to Challenges in Agriculture and Rural Development in the Europe and Central Asia Region: Sharing Experience and Enhancing Cooperation in the Region. William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI University of Missouri - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Page 1: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Policy Response to Challenges in Agriculture and Rural Development in the Europe and

Central Asia Region: Sharing Experience and

Enhancing Cooperation in the Region

William H. MeyersProfessor of Agricultural Economics

and Co-Director, FAPRIUniversity of Missouri

Twenty-Seventh FAO Regional Conference for EuropeYerevan, Armenia

13 May 20

Page 2: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Outline Food price surge and (partial) retreat Macroeconomic crisis and (slow) recovery Diverse impacts of and response to the crises How is food security jeopardized? Major uncertainties, challenges and

opportunities Policy priorities for discussion

Short term Medium to Long term

Page 3: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI
Page 4: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Comparison of real GDP growth rates in selected regions

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

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World

Major advanced economies (G7)

European Union

Central and eastern Europe

Commonwealth of Independent States

Page 5: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Diverse impacts on real GDP growth rates in Europe and Central Asia, 2009 to 2011

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-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

Uzbe

kist

anTu

rkm

enist

anAz

erba

ijan

Alba

nia

Tajik

istan

Kyrg

yz R

epub

licPo

land

Kaza

khst

anTF

YR M

aced

onia

Bela

rus

Bosn

ia a

nd

…Se

rbia

M

onte

negr

oCz

ech

Repu

blic

Croa

tiaGe

orgi

aSl

ovak

Rep

ublic

Bulg

aria

Turk

eyHu

ngar

ySl

oven

iaRo

man

iaRe

publ

ic o

f Mol

dova

Russ

ian

Fede

ratio

nEs

toni

aUk

rain

eAr

men

iaLa

tvia

Lith

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a

2009 2010 2011

Page 6: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Diverse response: share of stimulus in GDP and importance of social protection in the stimulus

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45

Georgia

Kazakhstan

Turkey

Russian Federation

Poland

Germany

Slovenia

Czech Republic

France

share of social protection (where available) total stimulus as % of 2008 GDP

Page 7: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Diverse structure: share of rural population in the total, 1992 compared with 2008

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

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1992 2008

Page 8: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Success in growth of net exports from the region

-505

10152025303540455055

Ukraine

Russian Federation

Kazakhstan

Page 9: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

How is food security jeopardized?

Reduction in the quantity and/or quality of food purchases High food prices Loss of employment or reduction of wages

and income Market disruption or policy reaction that

impairs availability

Page 10: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

How is food security jeopardized? Reduction in food production

High prices of feed and other inputs Lack of credit access

Reduction in the quantity and/or quality of food aid High food prices Decline of government/international donor

financial resources Macro instability, market disruption or policy

reaction that impairs availability

Page 11: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

A more uncertain future1. Road to economic recovery?2. Timing and size of oil price volatility?3. Will biofuel policies change?4. Will other policies be unstable? 5. Will DDA be completed in near term?6. Climate change and policy impacts?7. Wider range of possible outcomes8. Complicated decision making and planning9. Larger impacts on low income consumers

Page 12: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Challenge and Opportunity

1. Challenge – devise strategies that are sustainable in very uncertain conditions

2. Opportunity – focus on policies that contribute to long-term policy goals

3. National and international policy actions needed

Short run Long run

Page 13: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Policy priorities Short run

Prudent use of limited budget resources Avoid short-term policies that conflict with long-

term goals Food assistance and early warning Twin track approach – food aid and production aid Continue economic and structural reforms Complete the Doha Round of trade negotiations,

Restore trust in the international trading system and advance new member accession

Page 14: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Policy priorities Long run (but start yesterday)

Increasing economic growth is best strategy Investment (not land grabs) in agric. development

AND R&D for production and post harvest Improve market functioning to facilitate price

transmission and integration with global markets Risk management tools for farmers-men and women Enhance rural development and rural infrastructure

investments Invest in social protection or safety net measures to

protect vulnerable populations

Page 15: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

Conclusions Not simple formulas or quick remedies

Conditions in the region are diverse Situation is very volatile and persistent

Engage policy dialogue among experts in the region exchanging successes and failures Food and agricultural policies and reforms Climate change adaptation and mitigation

Dialogue begins here at high level but can continue among expert groups

Page 16: William H. Meyers Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director, FAPRI

CONTACT INFORMATION:EMAIL: [email protected]: WWW.FAPRI.MISSOURI.EDU

Thank you!