Abstract
PurposeDuring world price spike periods, the government is more likely to apply trade distortions to stabilize domestic prices, but the trade distortions would amplify fluctuations of international market prices. Which type of policy may stabilize the domestic market price, but not disturb the international market? This paper answers the question by taking public storage policy as a case study in the context of trade policy. Specially, this paper tries to identify the effect of domestic public storage on the world market price.Design/methodology/approachThis article extends a standard theoretical model of trade policy through incorporating domestic public storage policy and makes the model more applicable in the context of China. The extended model is then applied to analysis how domestic public storage policy affects the international market price in the context of trade policy. Finally, a properly identified structural vector auto-regression technique is applied to test the effect of domestic public storage on the world market price by using cotton data from China.FindingsThe theoretical model indicates that China's public storage policy could stabilize the international market price. In order to test the working mechanisms, China's soaring public storage between 2010 and 2014 is employed to identify the effects of China's cotton storage on the volatility of the world price. The empirical findings show that China was able to stabilize the international price of cotton to a non-trivial extent through alteration of its public stockpile.Originality/valueThe first contribution is that this paper extends a standard theoretical model of trade policy to incorporate domestic public storage policy, which enables us to explore the effects of domestic public storage policy on the world price in the context of China. The second major contribution is that this paper provides evidence that, as a large player in the world market, China's public storage policy could stabilize the international agricultural price to a substantial degree.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
Reference40 articles.
1. Export restrictions as stabilization responses to food crisis;American Journal of Agricultural Economics,2011
2. Government trade restrictions and international price volatility;Global Food Security,2012
3. Agricultural price distortions: trends and volatility, past, and prospective;Agricultural Economics,2013
4. Anderson, K., Ivanic, M. and Martin, W. (2014), “Food price spikes, price insulation and poverty”, in Chavas, J.-P., Hummels, D. and Wright, B.D. (Eds), The Economics of Food Price Volatility, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London.
5. Trade barrier volatility and agricultural price stabilization;World Development,2012