Chris Barrett C.H. Dyson School of Applied Economics & Management and Department of Economics, Cornell University November 19, 2012 Community and International.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
J. David Tàbara Institute of Environmental Science and Technology Autonomous University of Barcelona Integrated Climate Governance.
Advertisements

Monetization Challenges DALE KABAT – Catholic Relief Services IFAC 2008.
WORK AND PENSIONS SELECT COMMITTEE: Labour market seminar: 26 TH February: ‘Trends in part-time working and short-term employment contracts and the impacts.
Questions? GAO Presentation 2007 International Food Aid Conference Transportation Challenges That Impede the Efficiency of U.S. Food Aid Delivery.
GAO Presentation 2007 International Food Aid Conference Various Challenges Impede the Efficiency and Effectiveness of U.S. Food Aid.
Food aid provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill Stephanie Mercier Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Social Protection in China ---- Reform & Development in the Background of marketization, globalization & urbanization Prof. Xinping Guan (Nankai University,
Chris Barrett Cornell University May 7, 2012 Congressional Staff Briefing Congressional Research Service Washington, DC US Food Aid: Background Trends.
Chris Barrett Cornell University May 12, 2011 Congressional Research Service Briefing Capitol Visitor Center, Washington, DC The Evolution of US Food Aid:
USAID Office of Food for Peace Dale Skoric Title II Food Aid Programming.
Improving Food Aid: What Reforms Would Yield The Highest Payoff? Erin Lentz and Chris Barrett Cornell University AAEA Symposium on Food Aid Controversies.
1 International Food Aid and Development Conference August 2-4, 2010 Megatrends in Food Security Linking Food Aid and Food Security Source: GAO (photos)
Presentation to Reconsidering Food Aid workshop Partnership to Cut Hunger and Poverty in Africa Chris Barrett Cornell University March 2006 U.S. Food Aid.
USDA’s Local and Regional Purchase Pilot Program Fiscal Years 2008 thru 2012.
Role of Services in Economic Development
LRP Market Monitoring Training LOCAL AND REGIONAL PROCUREMENT 1. Introduction to LRP.
Agricultural Trade Outlook August 2011 Philip Abbott.
Global food markets Economics of Food Markets Lecture 2 Alan Matthews.
Ⓒ Olof S. Tackling the challenges in commodity markets and on raw materials Pierluigi Londero DG for Agriculture and Rural Development European Commission.
Chris Barrett October 27, 2010 Guest lecture to History/ASRC 3652 Cornell University Food Aid for Africa: Past and Present.
USAID Office of Food for Peace Dale Skoric. Trends? In 2008, an additional 115 million people joined the ranks of the hungry. Over 1 billion people worldwide.
New Modalities of International Food Assistance: A Review of the Evidence Joanna B. Upton Erin C. Lentz Christopher B. Barrett Cornell University Presentation.
United States Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service USDA Local and Regional Food Aid Procurement Pilot Project: Tools for Development.
International Food Aid and Development Conference Kansas City, Missouri June 27-29, 2011 For the full report, visit the GAO Web site, (GAO ,
USAID Office of Food for Peace Dale Skoric. U.S. Food Assistance - General Outline Title I: Trade & Development Assistance USDA Title II: Emergency &
1 Better Nutrition and Quality Control Can Further Improve U.S. Food Aid For the full report, visit the GAO Web site, (GAO , May 12,
UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy Presentation for the Advisory Commission November 2011.
Local and Regional Food Aid Procurement The state of knowledge as LRP Moves into its Second Generation David Tschirley Michigan State University Food Security.
Lessons and implications for agriculture and food Security in the region IFPRI-ADB POLICY FORUM 9-10 August 2007 Manila, Philippines Rapid Growth of Selected.
Global Agriculture Markets: Today and Tomorrow AgriEvolution Summit New Delhi, India JB Penn – Chief Economist December 5, Fourth World Summit on.
U.S. Foreign Assistance 101 Alleviating and Addressing Hunger.
 Canada provides food aid through four channels;  Emergency aid ($44 million in 2002)  Food Aid in Development Context Bi-lateral ($330 million 2009.
6 Reasons to Eat Local Food Eating local helps build a sustainable society. The underlying problems of today’s farming and food systems are reflections.
MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE FORESTRY AND FISHERIES GENDER DEVELOPMENT IN AGRICULTURE Presentation: September 2003.
The Impact of the World Trade Organization on Food Aid Policies USDA and USAID EXPORT FOOD AID CONFERENCE Kansas, City, Missouri April 25, 2006 Floyd Gaibler,
U.S. Development Assistance in an Evolving World Jeffrey Alwang Professor Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics Virginia Tech.
The Global Economic Crisis Gemma Owens Think Global Initiative Project Coordinator International Federation of Medical Students’ Associations (IFMSA)
BELLRINGER Explain in complete sentences what are demands and consumption of organic farming products.
Response Analysis: Approaches and Directions Forward Christopher B. Barrett and Erin C. Lentz, Cornell University LRP Learning Alliance Local And Regional.
The Key Changes of Interest to Farmers and Ranchers.
The 2002 Farm Bill: Implications for North American Trade Relationships North American Trade Relationships:Policy Challenges for 2002 and Beyond Chicago.
The World Bank Agriculture and Rural Development: Hunger and Malnutrition Kevin Cleaver World Bank Seminar Series 18 January 2006.
1 Survey of Economic and Social Conditions in Africa, 2006 Economic Commission for Africa Fortieth Session of the Conference of African Ministers of Finance,
Understanding Sustainable Diets: A descriptive analysis of the determinants and processes that influence diets and their impact on health, food security.
Business innovation in agriculture, food and natural resources Ag Situation and Outlook By Bill Knudson.
UNRWA’s Resource Mobilization Strategy A preview offered to the Sub-Committee Meeting 2 November.
THE CONCORD COALITION presented by Robert L. Bixby, Executive Director THE CONCORD COALITION Fiscal Future:
Researchers’ Role In Continuously Improving International Food Assistance Christopher B. Barrett Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics & Management.
NS4054 Fall Term 2015 Handbook of Oil Politics Paul Sullivan – Oil Supply.
Climate Action Meeting the EU’s Kyoto commitments & Avoiding a gap after 2012 Doha, 27 November 2012 Paolo CARIDI Policy Coordinator DG Climate Action.
Building Resilience Well-being of Future Generations Act and the Environment (Wales) Bill Emily Finney – Resilience Policy, Welsh Government.
Joe Collins – MD Ornua Dairy Trading & Ingredients
MIFIRA Framework Lecture 2 Response analysis and MIFIRA Chris Barrett and Erin Lentz February 2012.
Investing in our future: A European budget for climate security Russell Marsh Head of Policy – Green Alliance.
Title: Orientation Paper for SCoF Presenter: Simo Mncwango Fundisiwe Cwele Date: July 2014.
NS4054 Fall Term 2015 Sub-Saharan Scenarios. Main Trends I Commission on Energy and Geopolitics, Oil Security 2025, Sub-Saharan Africa Scenarios Key Fundamental.
Food Aid and Food Assistance: What Have We Learned Here? What Key Things Do We Still Need to Learn? Christopher B. Barrett Cornell University 4 th Transatlantic.
Trade Programs and Policies 2002 Farm Bill Education Conference Kansas City, Missouri May 20-21, 2002 Joe Outlaw Texas A&M University.
Energy Choices: Non-fossil vs. Fossil The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 Senate Energy Committee February 6, 2007 V. John White, Executive.
 The world produces 17% more food per person today than 30 years ago  The rate of food production has increased faster than the rate of population growth.
Global food markets Economics of Food Markets Lecture 2 Alan Matthews.
When in congress – Person is placed on a committee Head of Committees = Chairman Holds a lot of power Picked by seniority – Seniority Rule.
Cereal Consumption Declining, Pulses Production Declining
6th Grade Social Studies Urbanization
Global hunger –myth or fact?
U.S. Support for Global Food Security: Programs and Contributions
Response Analysis: Approaches and Directions Forward
Farm Policy Update: The Farm Bill Expired, Now What
The 2008 Farm Bill Chad Hart Center for Agricultural and Rural Development Iowa State University October 1, 2007 ISU Farm Management.
Position of the European Farmers on the changes and news within the new CAP François GUERIN | Second National Farmers meeting in Bulgaria 6 February.
Presentation transcript:

Chris Barrett C.H. Dyson School of Applied Economics & Management and Department of Economics, Cornell University November 19, 2012 Community and International Nutrition Seminar Series Cornell University US Food Aid: Background Trends and Key Policy Issues on the Cusp of a Farm Bill

1. Increasing emergency-affected populations -Natural disasters and affected persons have increased significantly over the past two generations. -The global number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) has grown from 20 to 27 mn/yr, to Background trends

2. Globalization of food markets -Food aid was originally a surplus disposal program. Take gov’t-held surpluses generated by farm price support programs and give them away beyond the US marketshed. -But virtually no place lies outside the marketshed today. Even in land-locked developing countries, commercial food imports have grown > 10-fold in the past 20 years! -This has led to a rapid transition towards cash-/market- based food assistance, especially since 2004 tsunami. Background trends

3. We have entered a high food price regime -For a variety of reasons, food demand growth has outpaced supply growth for the past decade. The result is historically high (inflation-adjusted) food prices for the indefinite future. -This makes food aid expensive. Background trends

4. More attention to micronutrient deficiencies -The Green Revolution and globalizing food markets have steadily reduced undernutrition. -But low micronutrient (mineral/vitamin) intake increasingly recognized as equally serious, especially for children due to irreversible effects -Hence growing attention to food aid quality (2011 GAO and Tufts/USAID studies). Background trends

Much Has Changed In US Food Aid Already For nearly 60 years, the USG has been the world’s largest donor of food aid for strategic, economic and moral purposes. Still 50-60% of global flows each year. Food aid volumes have fallen sharply over the past decade-plus, from the US and globally due to trends described already. Huge reorientation from monetized program food aid (Title I) to emergency and project (Title II) food aid, again in response to the trends described. US Food Aid

7. Timeliness (Golden Hour principle) -Delays are expensive and deadly ( Niger example). -Most losses from disasters are ‘post-exposure’. Rapid, appropriate response matters enormously to recovery. -Farm Bill still sharply limits local and regional purchases (LRP) in US food aid programs although they account for 82% of non-US food aid today. -Prepositioning the best feasible Title II option now. But 25-40% more expensive than regular shipments (GAO ‘07). -Big gains from LRP: USDA LRPP and USAID EFSP projects delivered 62% (14 weeks) faster, on average, than shipments from US. -Hard earmark on non-emergency funds ties FFP’s hands: big risks of 4 th quarter emergency response interruptions. Key policy issues

7. Cost-effectiveness -Increasing need with decreasing resources. Need to “do more with less”. -Need to reduce unnecessary (non-commodity) costs: transport is huge (especially with cargo preference rules … adds ~$150mn/year to costs … but rolled back in July). -USDA LRPPP/USAID EFSP reduced cost of delivered grains by >50% on average. -Monetization: just 58-76% cost recovery … hugely wasteful (GAO). The rest of the world abandoned monetization years ago and OMB recommended ending it back in Yet non-emergency Title II monetization has grown from 28% in 1996 to 74% in Better options exist: community development funds (Foreign Ops), 202e, Title I buybacks. Key policy issues

7. Food Aid Quality -Need to address more varied nutritional needs than simply filling a dietary energy supply shortfall. -Especially important in light of the First 1000 Days Initiative -Need to match commodity choices to assessed needs to achieve cost-effective delivery of needed nutrients (what is cheap in $/MT terms not always cheap in $/nutrient terms) -Increased attention to food aid quality … LRP has proved equal to shipments from US in food quality w/much greater capacity to resolve quality problems at delivery than with shipments from the US. Key policy issues

7. Flexibility -With greater food market access and superior timeliness and cost-effectiveness of commercial channels, cash/vouchers often preferred to food. -Need “response analysis” (i) to identify appropriate form/ source of assistance, (ii) to ensure assistance doesn’t disrupt markets on which the poor – and dev’t – most depend. -But need options: LRP just 2% of US food aid vs. 82% for ROW. Mainstream LRP not make it a separate program. -Slow/awkward movement toward budget integration already achieved in Canada, EU and other key donor countries, moving food aid into international development budgets and out of farm policy and agriculture budgets. Key policy issues

7. Senate -Senate passed a bipartisan Farm Bill capping monetization, making LRP permanent and slightly reducing the ‘hard earmark’ for non-emergency food aid. -Far from ideal, but progress nonetheless House -No Farm Bill vote yet. Ag Committee passed a bill that drops LRP, reinforces monetization and the hard earmark. If no Farm Bill? -USAID authority for new programming expires Dec. 31. At that point >50% of the world’s food aid flows cease! Farm Bill 2012

US food aid still essential to global emergency response. The Farm Bill offers a chance to further adapt US policy to all that has changed in the world of food aid. But the current House version is a step backwards and perhaps no bill at all. Key policy issues for the 2012 Farm Bill: - timeliness- cost-effectiveness - food aid quality- flexibility Implications:-permanent, mainstreamed LRP - reduced/constrained monetization - relaxed Title II non-emergency hard earmark Conclusion

Thank you for your time and interest!