Categories
Economics

[1633] Of rice is up but not vegetable

A sudden realization of a global food crisis among the public, or rather, prices increase of rice, has prompted several questions relating to supply chain and economics. One interesting economic question that I was requested to answer was why prices of fresh produce are not treading the path of rice prices?

To be honest, I have not seen the relevant data for fresh product — which by the way generally means vegetable — but the increase in rice prices is painted all over the news. But if we take the implicit assumptions of the question as true, why indeed do we not see the same pattern that dominates the rice market in the fresh produce market?

When I read the question, price effect, elasticity of demand and the Engel’s Law came to mind.

The Engel’s Law is an economic observation first expressed by statistician Ernst Engel[1] in the 19th century which states that a proportion of income dedicated to food, mostly starches, is larger the poorer a person is. I believe the Engel’s Law does answer the question to some extent.

Allow me to explain. Take a deep breath too.

An individual has some amount of income and a fraction of that income is dedicated to food. That fraction is further distribution among various kinds of food and we shall make a simple model which consists of staple food and luxury foodstuffs. We assume expenditure on other items as constant. Or, to make it easier, let us assume that we live to eat.

When price of staple food goes up, the person will have less purchasing power; that means he could buy less staple food for the same amount of money compared to before the price increase. If he wants to consume the same amount of luxury foodstuff, he will have to cut his consumption of staple food. The issue here is that it is staple food and staple food translates into low elasticity of demand. In simple English, changes in price do not affect quantity demanded by too much.

Therefore, cutting back on staple food consumption may not be the most preferred option. Thus, he cuts back on luxury foodstuffs while trying to maintain his current rice consumption level. As a result, demand for rice stays put, or falls only slightly while demand for other foodstuff falls dramatically.

This predicts a fall in prices for fresh produce demand while rice prices would stay constant, if everything else is the same.

With the background of increasing population size across the world, demand in general may be on the rise, causing a general upward pressure on prices of all goods. It has to be noted that a majority of those in a society is mostly made up of lower and middle class individuals and this is the relevance of Engel’s Law. What this explanation may lead to is this: while prices for both goods may increase, rice prices grow faster than luxury foodstuffs by virtue of constant demand for rice of an individual and decreased demand for luxury foodstuff of an individual with increasing population size.

Finally, a possible anomaly happening at the demand curve: the curve is most likely to be a vertical line perpendicular to the quantity axis or something close to that. I wish I had Matlab or something with me. I would love to run a model with the associated indifference curves.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — Gregory Clark in Chapter 3, of his famed A Farewell to Alms insists that the statistician Engel is “not to be confused with his rabble-rousing contemporary Friedrich Engels”. Yes communists worldwide, Mr. Clark took a cheap shot at you.

Categories
Economics

[1632] Of freer trade for rice, please

Tyler Cowen writes:

At first glance, this seems understandable, because a country may not wish to send valuable foodstuffs abroad in a time of need. Nonetheless, the longer-run incentives are counterproductive.

Export restrictions send a message to farmers that their crops are least profitable precisely when they are most needed. There is little incentive to plant, harvest or store enough rice — or any other crop, for that matter — as a hedge against bad times. [Freer Trade Could Fill the World’s Rice Bowl. Tyler Cowen. New York Times. April 27 2008]

Also from Indonesia:

We know that:
a. The world rice prices hit the $1,000-a-tonne level for the first time
b. Indonesia’s rice production is estimated to be about 2m tonnes higher than consumption this year thanks to improving yields and an increase in the harvested area.

What can you infer?

Yes, sell the surplus and reap the windfall profit. I heard you said you always want to help rice farmers. [High Price Rice Quiz. café salemba. April 23 2008]

Despite having a surplus, Indonesia is restricting rice export with hope to slow down the march of local rice prices to achieve parity with prices in the international market.[1]

And, ehem, hey you protectionist Malaysians, how do you feel to be on the other end of protectionist policy now?

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — Indonesia has imposed controls over rice exports as Asian states battle food supply concerns which have been caused by soaring global prices. [Indonesia curbs its rice exports. BBC News. April 15 2008]

Categories
Economics

[1623] Of price and supply control in Malaysia

This is just for my own future use.

Following is the list of 11 price-controlled items:

  1. Petrol
  2. Diesel
  3. Liquefied petroleum gas
  4. Steel
  5. Cement
  6. Flour
  7. Sugar
  8. Condensed milk
  9. Bread
  10. Chicken
  11. Cooking oil

Following is the list of 20 supply-controlled items,
whereby supplies are regulated ensure demand is always met.

  1. Sugar
  2. Milk (including condensed, powdered milk, cream)
  3. Salt
  4. Cement and clinker
  5. Flour
  6. Cooking oil
  7. Fertiliser
  8. Insecticide
  9. Formic acid
  10. Mild steel, round bar
  11. Kerosene
  12. Preserved fish
  13. Rice (in Sabah state only)
  14. Paddy (in Sabah state only)
  15. Petrol
  16. Diesel
  17. Liquefied petroluem gas
  18. Bread
  19. Fuel
  20. Chicken [Malaysia’s web of price and supply controls. Reuters. March 26 2008]

What are the implications of the two control methods?

Price control will cause shortage or surplus when the list prices are disconnected from that of the market. Shortage occurs when prices are set lower than it should be. Producers will not have the incentive to produce as much as the level they would produce under free market condition while consumers will demand more than what they would normally do under free market. When surplus occurs, prices are simply set too high compared to what free market would call for; producers will produce too much and consumers will demand too little.

Supply control affects only the supply curve but it distorts the market nonetheless. This method forces prices that consumers pay to go higher than what equilibrium would otherwise produce when supply is set less than free market quantity. This is a producer-friendly policy as producers are able to charge consumers with higher prices than what free market would dictate. In other words, shortage is beneficial to producers. The exact opposite of the mechanics is true when supply is set higher than equilibrium.

The two methods reach roughly the same conclusion but the dimensions which each method tackles must be noted.

The two methods have one common characteristic: it amplifies an effect called price stickiness. There is always a lag in updating the set prices or quantity to match the prevailing situation of the market. In that way, these controls are inferior to free market mechanism as information disperses among participants of the market faster than those in the state responsible for the controls could react.

That brought me to an intriguing question: if those in the state could react faster to some relevant information with those controls compared to those in the market, would that make the market as an inferior tool to the controls?

Maybe that is a good thesis to explore. Hmm…

And I am done with my mental masturbation for today.

Categories
Economics Liberty

[1502] Of welcome to the Soviet Union

Remind me again, did the Communist defeat the combined Commonwealth forces during the Malayan Emergency?

PUTRAJAYA: Five kilograms — that is the maximum amount of cooking oil that each consumer can buy when a move to solve the shortage of the essential item is enforced next week.

Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Datuk Shafie Apdal however did not specify when the move would be implemented to increase stocks of cooking oil, especially in areas like Kelantan, Pahang, Malacca, Kedah and some parts of the Klang Valley where the shelves are getting bare. [5kg buying limit on cooking oil. The Star. January 5 2008]

I ask you comrades, because our economic policies are showing the characteristic inefficiency[1] of a communist economy.

Let prices be free instead. I would rather have inequality in wealth rather than equality in poverty.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

p/s — This is Malaysia under the Abdullah administration:

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

It is time to take it back. If we do not, these people would have died in vain. They would have fought for nothing.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — See remarks in the comment section. Shortage is not uncommon. Similar episodes are observable in the past, for instance, in the sugar market not too long ago. Such shortages constitute inefficiency. After some rethinking, the word inefficiency works better than the word characteristic. Indeed, Malaysia has run a centralized economy for the longest time but I do not remember when was the last time the government has imposed a rationing regime on goods (okay, apart from water…). Perhaps, I am suffering from recency effect bias but the point here, taking the hyperbole aside, there is a mismanagement of the economy that is associated with centralized planning.

Categories
Economics

[1365] Of dear minister, it takes two to tango

A minister on TV earlier refutes chicken vendors’ assertion that there is shortage of chickens in the market by pointing out that chicken supply has increased by 120%. I wonder why he did not mention how high the chicken demand has increased as we enter Ramadan?

And oh boy. It annoys me to no end when people within the mainstream media as well as the government talk about prices without any understanding or worse, disregard of economics.