primary commodities and economic development: new challenges and policy option in the 21 st century...
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Primary Commodities and Economic Development: New Challenges and Policy Option in the 21st Century
Machiko NissankeDepartment of Economics
School of Oriental and African Studies
University of London
16 September 2008
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 2
The high prices and volatility across primary commodities hit the global community at the time of turmoil of financial markets– Placed commodity issues back at the international policy agenda;
In contrast, the persistent reluctance to acknowledge commodity-related developmental issues and the resultant failure to deal with them effectively in a timely fashion in the 1980s and 1990s entailed a heavy cost to economic development of commodity-dependent low-income DCs;
Maizels (1987, 1992 and 1994) convincingly revealed how the beginning of the debt crisis of poor countries in the late 1970s coincided with that of the ‘conveniently forgotten’ commodity crisis (the depth of which was worse than the Great Depression in the 1930s);
His in-depth and comprehensive analysis of commodity issues and his urge to formulate correct international policy responses to the debt crisis could have led to an early resolution of the protracted debt overhang condition in low-income countries;
Many HIPC and LDCs, mostly in SSA- very high commodity-dependence; All debt relief efforts, including HIPC initiatives, failed to pay sufficient attention
to the plight of commodity-dependent economies- an international poverty trap through a commodity-dependent integration into the global economy in the 1980s and 1990s ;
Introduction -Backgrounds
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Introduction –Backgrounds (Cont’d) The contrast between commodity-dependent economies and newly
industrialising economies through climbing technology and skill-ladders – largely accounts for their divergent growth and development experiences.
Globalisation has not left commodity-dependent countries untouched Changing landscape governing world commodity markets and production
both at the Global and National Levels At the global level:
High price volatility – a rapid expansion of derivatives markets attracting portfolio investors not engaging in physical commodity trading, leading to a loosening of the demand-supply relationships;
Fundamental demand-supply relationships shifting, originating from fast growing economies (e.g.China and India) for raw materials and agricultural goods
The impact of climate changes shifting the relative composition between food crops, bio-fuels, cash crops – effects on food prices & food security
The changing relative positions between TNCs and producers in GVCs
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Background (Continued) and Objectives
At the national level Institutional changes affecting agricultural producers in input
provisions, access to new technology, extension services and output marketing arrangements;
Producers exposed to high price volatility- costly and imperfect hedging instruments- uneven access
Institutional changes affecting mineral-based economies – privatisation negotiated between TNCs and governments, based on the asymmetric power relationships – mineral rents not accruing much to producing countries
Objectives of the paper Examine the emerging landscape affecting commodity markets and
production Discuss new challenges, opportunities and development issues in the
light of these changes
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Commodity Prices and Economic Development in a Historical Context
Two key issues in the North-South divides : i) the declining TOT (Prebish-Singer Hypothesis); ii) High price volatility and instability;
Explained in terms of fundamental differences on supply and demand sides affecting price formations between primary commodities and manufactured goods (e.g. low income elasticities on the demand side and technology advancement etc for the declining TOT as well as low short-run price elasticities on both demand and supply side for high price volatilities of tree crops and minerals);
Increasing high price volatility due to the closer two-way links between financial and commodity markets (Maizels 1994);
Numerous empirical studies: i) Large price volatility dominating secular decline in real commodity prices; ii) the real commodity price index fell by four-fifths between 1900-1999 (the link between the commodity crisis and debt crisis in the 1980s and 1990s.
large commodity price cycles have become more frequent with shortened duration and increased amplitude over the recent decades.
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Commodity Prices: Trends and Volatility(1862-1997)
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International Commodity Agreements (ICAs)
The focus of attention of the “commodity problem” mainly on short-term price instability and its effects on export earnings and income of commodity-dependent DCs (Maizels, 1992-1994).
Keynes (1938& 1942)- the importance of establishing buffer stocks for the main commodities (reflecting his deep understanding of the effects of commodity price dynamics on financial ¯o performance);
Integrated Programme for Commodities of UNCTAD in 1976 –ICAs (Cocoa, Coffee, Rubber, Suger and Tin)- price stabilisation within a band through financing buffer stocks or export quota;
The collapse of ICAs by the end of 1980s (finally the abandonment of INRA in 1999):
Technical problems with implementation of ICAs and the lack of political and financial support from consuming countries (disagreements over stabilisation bands at the time of sharply declining prices; collective action problems and disincentives, free-rider problems)
CCFF (high conditionality) STABEX, FLEX- pro-cyclical disbursement etc With the collapse of the ICAs, a shift to the use of risk hedging
instruments.
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Selected Commodity Prices (1957-2005)
Selected agricultural prices (indexes)
050
100150200250300350400450
1957
q01
1960
q01
1963
q01
1966
q01
1969
q01
1972
q01
1975
q01
1978
q01
1981
q01
1984
q01
1987
q01
1990
q01
1993
q01
1996
q01
1999
q01
2002
q01
2005
q01
Cocoa Coffee Cotton Rice Tea
Selected mineral prices (indexes)
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
1957
q01
1960
q01
1963
q01
1966
q01
1969
q01
1972
q01
1975
q01
1978
q01
1981
q01
1984
q01
1987
q01
1990
q01
1993
q01
1996
q01
1999
q01
2002
q01
2005
q01
Copper Iron Nickel Zinc
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Nominal commodity Price indices (1957-2008)
Commodity prices (1957-2008)
050
100150200250300350
1957
q01
1960
q01
1963
q01
1966
q01
1969
q01
1972
q01
1975
q01
1978
q01
1981
q01
1984
q01
1987
q01
1990
q01
1993
q01
1996
q01
1999
q01
2002
q01
2005
q01
2008
q01
Agricultural Index Metal Index Fuel prices (US$)
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Monthly Commodity Pice index by commodity groups (1995-2008)
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Recent Trends: General Observations
The general commodity price index in US dollars from 100 in 2000 to 300 in the mid-2008, but not uniform across commodities;
The sharp rise in the last two years (2006-8) of basic and political sensitive goods, pushing fuel and food cost, affecting adversely the poor most;
The price of tropical beverages and agricultural materials increased less, but, the prices of vegetable oilseeds and oils (bio-fuel crops) increased sharper than general food crops;
The sharpest increase of all is for mineral commodities (copper, zinc, nickel, iron, aluminium etc.)
The shifts in fundamental demand-supply relationships -a key factor for price movements for commodities over medium term (China and India factors on the demand side, and supply constraints due to subdued investment in the low price periods of the 1980s and 1990s);
Inventories was low at the time of price surge for minerals – asymmetry in inventory and price movements;
The high correlation between minerals, and agricultural vs energy prices
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 12
Inventories and Stock-Price Relationships for minerals
Stocks (volume)
0100200300400500600700800900
1000
29/1
2/19
7808
/12/
1980
25/3
/198
211
/07/
1983
19/6
/198
530
/1/1
987
13/9
/198
826
/4/1
990
12/0
9/19
9121
/7/1
993
03/0
3/19
9515
/10/
1996
28/5
/199
801
/10/
2000
22/8
/200
104
/04/
2003
16/1
1/20
0429
/6/2
006
02/1
1/20
08
Thou
sand
sM
T
Tin Nickel Lead Copper
Copper: price-stock
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
08/01
/1979
02/03
/1981
08/09
/1982
02/10
/1984
15/8/
1985
18/2/
1987
23/8/
1988
26/2/
1990
30/8/
1991
03/04
/1993
09/07
/1994
03/12
/1996
15/9/
1997
19/3/
1999
21/9/
2000
27/3/
2002
30/9/
2003
04/04
/2005
10/06
/2006
Thou
sand
s M
T
0500100015002000250030003500400045005000
UK £/
MT
stock price
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World Cereal Consumption, Production, Stocks and Prices
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Recent Trends: General Observations (cont’d) Close interlinks between oil and agricultural commodity prices through
higher transport costs and other input cost; Higher food prices from the abrupt shift in arable land use from food crops
towards bio-fuel crops (the Climate-change effect); Increases in demand for agricultural products from EM economies; Neglected agricultural sectors, resulting in low investment in agricultural
technology and supporting infrastructures: Over medium term – an entering into a super price cycle? Real prices of non-fuel commodities still follow a downward trend from a
longer historical perspective for 1960-2007; continuing high price volatility – the rapid growth of commodity derivatives
markets since the early 2000 – associated with dot-com babble-burst and the recent upheaval in financial markets – the flight from equities/bonds to commodities as well as inflation hedging;
New actors in commodity markets ( investment funds, pension and hedge funds and sovereign wealth funds);
High correlation across commodities as a result of commodity index trading- noise trading – and less reflective of the fundamentals.
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Primary Commodity Prices: Real and Nominal
Real Price
Nominal PriceReal Price Tend
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Price Volatilities of Non-Fuel Commodities vs Fuel and Manufacturred goods
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Changes in World Market Structures The need to understand structural changes and institutional arrangements
(Maizels 1984);Commodity markets – not text book perfect competitive markets
oligopsonistic and oligopolistic market structures - the relative bargaining power of actors shifting in favour of TNCs (Maizels 1984);
The effects of derivatives markets on commodity price dynamics: Q: whether futures markets operate as an efficient mechanism for price
information and discovery in the presence of powerful trading conglomerate TNCs and portfolio investors with little interests in physical commodities;
Q: Whether price volatility is exacerbated by the entry and presence of speculative noise trading or the prevalence herd behaviour (Pindyke (2004) ;
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 18
A Case study of NYBOT Coffee Markets
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
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0.8
ratio
of
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om
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rcia
l O
I to
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I
- A test of the ratio of non-commercial open interest to total open interest
-test of structural breaks in this ratio & in the relationships between prices and world demand and supply
- test of the monthly volatility index of future prices and future trading activities; reflecting new kind players since 2000
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Evolving Global Commodity Chains (GVCs) and the Price Transmission Process
Actors in commodity producing countries have become marginalized and isolated with withdrawal of institutional support and the subsequent loss of their bargaining power, as vertically integrated TNCs had consolidated their positions over GVCs (production, processing and marketing);
The parallel process of fragmentation and integration has often resulted in a hugely skewed distribution of gains from commodity trade.
The governance structures of GVCs have become buyer-driven with a shift in the distribution of value skewed in favour of consuming countries ;
The widening gap between producer and retail prices for a composite bundle of commodities- showing how much rents can be created and how skewed rents distribution is in commodity chains.
Hedging instruments do not provide a perfect risk management tool -the greater divergence between spot prices and future prices;
Hedging instruments require high liquid resources;
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 20
Evolving Global Commodity Chains (GVCs) and the Price Transmission Process (Cont’d)
An examination of the price transmission mechanisms along coffee supply chains and how different actors are engaged in price risk management A market consolidation by very large multinational commodity trading
conglomerates in green coffee and processing Conglomerates with own in-house brokerages in futures and options
and research departments- engaging in hedging as well as speculations with knowledge of both physical and derivatives markets ( the use of a “price-to be fixed contract, linking to prices on future markets at delivery date through hedging);
Smaller single-commodity trading firms have entered into niche markets, trading in specialty coffees
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 21
Impacts of Changing Market Structures on Producers
Changes in Institutional environments at the National Level State-run marketing boards were dismantled or downsized and price
stabilisation funds or mechanisms ceased to exist; Domestic commodity traders and producers are exposed to greater price
risks as volatile prices are transmitted from the downstream to the upstream;
International Task Force on Commodity Risk Management (ITFCRM) to promote a application of risk hedging management by actors in upstream;
Issues- the prohibitive financial cost and skewed access to information and high technical barriers for small actors as well as creating an adequate regulatory oversight agency ;
Resulted in geographical fragmentation of marketing activities, and placed small-holders in a weaker position viz private traders in both inputs provisions and marketing of their produce.
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 22
Price Risk Management in Upstream Coffee Chain in Uganda and Tanzania
In the pre-liberalisation period: in Uganda -a dual marketing system with both private and cooperative
channels but controlled all exports under the Coffee Marketing Board. Price risks were borne by the marketing boards:
In Tanzania- marketing was conducted through the cooperative marketing system and all exports went through the coffee auction. Price risk was borne by cooperatives but shared out amongst members through the payment system to smooth out farmers’ income.
In the post-liberalisation period: In Uganda- most liberalised system. The marketing is dominated by the
top 5 companies (all subsidiaries of large MNCs) taking over 70 % of market share:
In Tanzania- the auction system retained and cooperatives remain strong in N. regions: law to eliminate captive coffee prohibiting local traders from profiting at the auction, but again the top 5 MNC subsidiaries’ market share of 68 %.
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 23
Price Risk Management in Upstream Coffee Chain in Uganda and Tanzania
In Uganda, local traders shielded from intra-day price fluctuations, through MNCs hedging, but are exposed to inter-day or weekly swings. To protect their interests, they purchase coffee at stable, but low prices. Producers are offered low farm-gate prices – coffee production has been declining despite increasing world prices.
In Tanzania, where cooperatives remain strong, farmers are protected through the payment system, allowing farmers to smooth income within season to some extent. Auctions take place weekly, so weekly price fluctuations are shared among members. In other areas, gfarmers organise some POs. A tendency to get into niche markets with premium prices (fair-trade marketing etc with the use of forward contracts-Kili-cafe).
-Still coffee production falling in Tanzania too.
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Changing institutional environments for coffee and cotton farmers and their consequences in Tanzania
After liberalisation, both sectors suffered from institutional vacuum: In the cotton sector cooperative unions collapsed, while in the coffee sector, cooperative unions and POs survived in N. regions, but facing resource constraints:
In purchasing and processing: In cotton: no thriving markets with competing traders and ginners.
Producers are spatially fragmented and isolated both between and within villages. The poorest hardest hit.
In coffee: Choices between selling traders or coops. More differentiation taken place, smaller holders hit hard.
In input provisions: In both sectors, no reliable supplies- most devastating. Neither the passbook system of CDF for cotton, the voucher system for coffee not working for the poor, exploited by ginners and traders.
In extension services, access to new technology & information: Ukiriguru for cotton and TACRI for coffee under-funded, and no systematic provisions:
Implications for farm-gate prices for cotton and coffee – Farmers are fragmented between and within villages- no competitive integrated market.
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 25
Cotton Prices (World, export and producer Prices)
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
1990
/91
1991
/92
1992
/93
1993
/94
1994
/95
1995
/96
1996
/97
1997
/98
1998
/99
1999
/00
2000
/01
2001
/02
2002
/03
2003
/04
2004
/05
2005
/06
2006
/07
2007
/08
World Price in US$ per kg Producer Price in US$ per kg Export Price in US$ per kg
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 26
Coffee Prices (World, export and producer Prices)
-
0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
3.50
4.00
4.50
1995
/96
1996
/97
1997
/98
1998
/99
1999
/2000
2000
/01
2001
/02
2002
/03
2003
/04
2004
/05
2005
/06
2006
/07
KNCU Producer Price US$ per kg Export Price US$ per kg
Auction Price US$ per kg ICO Indicator Price US$ per kg (Mild Arabica)
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 27
Managing Resource-Based Economies over Commodity Price Cycles
The economic cycles of commodity dependent DCs are dominated by commodity price movements;
The hypersensitivity to externally originated instability is one of the critical weaknesses of natural resource-rich economies;
An eventual transformation into diversified economic structures is the real solution to the problems;
The “commodity trap” can be overcome only through an effective use of natural resource rents in the transition period;
Successful economic management over the commodity price cycles, are indispensable for the critical intervening period;
Yet, so far, demand management has been pro-cyclical to the direction of both internal and external market forces rather than counter-cyclical;
Dutch-Disease is by no means inevitable, and its symptoms are observed because economies tend to run into short-term absorptive capacity and supply bottlenecks;
The policy of time-phasing is one key - a policy of de-synchronization of the path of absorption from that of income.
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 28
Macroeconomic Management over Commodity Price Cycles
Intertemporal optimal allocation of resources is an issue of intelligent portfolio management of a whole range of domestic and foreign assets and liablities in the light of the current and the expected return‑risk structure over the commodity price cycle;
A call for a strategic approach to fiscal and financial management of mineral rents over a medium term price cycle of commodities;
Decisions over the inter-temporal portfolio allocation of rents for smoothing an absorption path as well as over the spending and expenditure patterns i.e. the sectoral allocation between tradables vs non-tradables or domestically produced goods vs imported goods, in view of avoiding to aggravate various critical supply bottlenecks.
Allowing a time to build supply capacity to move PPF outwards. The role of exchange rate policy combines with an appropriate monetary
framework with a view of intra-cycle movement of the real exchange rate. Taking into account the tendency of Dutch Disease Syndrome induced by
market forces;
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 29
Exchange Rate Management The centrality of a coordinated policy framework to work out appropriate
exchange rate management and monetary policy regimes not only for a short-run stabilisation purpose, but also for avoiding the detrimental long-term effects of a commodity boom;
Allowing a flexibility but managing with a view of controlling and reducing volatility in a countercyclical manner
Evaluation- the proposals for the Inflation Target framework for monetary policy under a floating regime and the commodity currency (Peg the Export Price, PEP) regimes for exchange rate management the inflation;
IT regime with a pure floating; a nominal anchor to be provided by a credible institutional commitment to the IT regime( with intermediate regimes vanishing under the impossible trinity)– transparency and accountability;
Fear of floating prevails in EMs, so operating with an escape close for CA management;
In LDC, fear of floating coming not from a high pass-through rate or liability dollarisation but from fear of macro instability from CA development;
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 30
Exchange Rate Management (cont’d) Exchange Rate Protectionism – actively using exchange rate as a
development policy tool (Korea, Chile and Botswana) for attaining a desirable CA position on a sustainable basis by keeping exchange rate at competitive levels to pursue export-led growth;
The IT regime may subject economies to large swings and shifts in the real exchange rate.
The PEP (Commodity Currency) Proposal by J. Frankel- peg – to peg to the real price of main export commodity (or commodity index- PEPI)-,i.e. to stabilise “the price of local currency in terms of commodity” ;
“PEP delivers simultaneously a nominal anchor as promised under a fixed exchange rate regime and automatic adjustment in the face of commodity price fluctuations on world markets as promised under a floating regime”.
PEP- the export price targeting instead the Inflation Targeting based on CPI , to take into account TOT shocks;
Operationalising PEPs – it can be set with in a band on a monthly basis, rather than daily operations;
Many questions to be answered about suitability as a counter-cyclical instrument on a basis of simulation analyses.
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 31
Changing Landscape Governing the Mining Sector and Macroeconomic Environments – Zambia vs Chile
Privatisation of mining industry in Zambia and Chile; In Zambia, ZCCM privatised with a small share allocated to the
government; TNCs benefiting from very low royalties and low taxes on profits; contribution of mining rents to the fiscal budget- marginal.
In Chile, CODELCO privatised, but negotiated to retain government’s share of 40% and fair tax rates constantly renegotiated; Fiscal surplus is saved in a sovereign fund offshore, according to the structural budget rule set with a view of medium term copper price forecasts to relieve short-run absorptive capacity constraints
Monetary and exchange rate regimes In Zambia: aggregate monetary target with a floating regime only to
smooth out extreme short-run volatility – now a move to the IT regime is under consideration: Exchange rate is not deployed as a development tool ( See Bova’s econometric study of the inflation-appreciation trade-off revisited).
In Chile: active management of exchange rates with in a band till 1999, and a shift to the IT regime with a escape clause to keep CA in balance.
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 32
Comparative Analysis of Real Exchange Rate Movements (Chile and Zambia)
Real effective exchange rate
0.020.040.060.080.0
100.0120.0140.0160.0180.0
1993
m02
1994
m01
1994
m12
1995
m11
1996
m10
1997
m09
1998
m08
1999
m07
2000
m06
2001
m05
2002
m04
2003
m03
2004
m02
2005
m01
2005
m12
2006
m11
2007
m10
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Zambian RER (left-scale) Chile RER (right-scale)
SOAS Commodity Workshop, September 2008 33
Concluding Remarks The hypersensitivity to externally originated instability is one of the critical
weaknesses of commodity-dependent low income countries ; The real answer to the “commodity Trap” – transformation into diversified
economic structures, which require rigorous investments in production capacity and physical and social infrastructures.
Call for a strong commodity sector, where the process of active learning-by-doing experiences and accumulation can take place;
The new landscape emerging under globalisation tend to discourage this process of learning and accumulation;
The institutional environments facing commodity producers both at the global and domestic levels in SSA have weakened the capacity and resiliency of small holders and mining industries;
The need for strengthening international and domestic institutions governing commodity trade and production throughout commodity chains;
more active forms of cooperation and joint action with TNCs to accelerate the learning process;
The renegotiation of distribution of mineral rents and more regulations over transactions on derivatives markets.
Calls for a more innovative compensating financing facilities as ex-ante debt relief mechanism.