Affiliation:
1. Department of Agriculture and Resource Economics University of California Davis California USA
2. Department of Agriculture Economics Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA
Abstract
AbstractRecent extreme events and the disruptions they caused have made food supply chain resilience a key topic for researchers and policymakers. This paper provides input into these discussions by evaluating the efficiency and resilience properties of the leading policy proposals. We develop a conceptual model of a prototype agricultural supply chain, parameterize the model based on the empirical literature, and conduct simulations to assess the impacts on resilience and economic welfare of four key policy proposals: (i) intensified antitrust enforcement to improve market competition, (ii) subsidization of entry of additional processing capacity, (iii) prevention of price spikes through anti‐price‐gouging laws, and (iv) diversification of production and processing across multiple regions. Results show that some of the policies have potential to improve supply‐chain resilience, but their impacts depend on the existing market structure, and resilience gains often come at the cost of reduced efficiency.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
9 articles.
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