Food Prices and Poverty

Do higher food prices help or hinder poverty reduction? Despite much debate, existing research has almost solely relied on simulation models to address this question. In this paper World Bank poverty estimates are used to systematically test the relationship between changes in poverty and exogenous changes in real domestic food prices. The paper uncovers indicative evidence that increases in food prices are associated with reductions in poverty, not increases. A likely empirical explanation is the relatively strong agricultural supply and wage responses to food price increases, and the fact that the majority of the world's poor still heavily rely on agriculture or agriculture-related activities to earn a living.

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Auteur principal: Headey, Derek D.
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Langue:English
en_US
Publié: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016-11
Sujets:food crisis, food prices, poverty reduction, food security, agricultural supply response, wages,
Accès en ligne:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/421991480340958730/Food-prices-and-poverty
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25701
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par Headey, Derek D.
Publié 2018-10
Journal Article biblioteca
Banco Mundial