Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Fre 340
food and resource econ
33
Agriculture
Undergraduate 3
02/16/2008

Additional Agriculture Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term

Lec 2

 

 

Why does Agriculture growth lag behind industry?
Definition
 
- Often taxed, restrictions (infrastructure, rural credit, export restrictions)
- Innovations less frequent
Term
Lecture 2 
Give specific reasons why Growth in Agriculture always slower than industry?
Definition
 
-inherently profitable industrial opportunities
 
agriculture is usually taxed
-Overvalued exchange rate
-Taxation of ag output via regulated p, direct tax, export tax, input taxes
-Lower priority for investment projects and infrastructure
-Rural Credit
-Labour mobility restricted for rural people (China, Vietnam)
-Lack of applied agricultural research investments
Term
 
Lec 2 
Where should you invest?  Ag or Industry? 
Definition

Depends if want balanced or unbalanced growth

Term

Lec 2 

Why invest in balanced growth?

Definition
 
Ag Sector also capable of high growth
-Contributes to aggregate growth
-Equitable in terms of reducing poverty directly
-Inv in industry + ignoring agriculture and rural areas does not appear to be sufficient
-More politically sustainable
Term

Lec 2 

Why invest in unbalaced?

Definition
More potential for higher growth in industry than agriculture
Term

Lec 2

 

How to get rapid growth from Ag sector?

Definition
 
-Remove taxation
-Invest in ag research
-Maintain/create competitive markets for inputs, outputs
-Remove bottlenecks such as infrastructure
-Privatize SOEs in Agriculture
-Create appropriate exchange rate
-Allow easy and unrestricted migration from rural areas
-Invest in Rural Areas also
Education, health, infrastructure, local government finances, local government autonomy*, competition
Term
 
Lec 3 
What is Economic Growth?
Definition
 
process of sustained increases in income due to efficient improvements in the economy
Term

Lec 3 

What causes efficient improvements in an economy?

Definition
 
new knowledge,
 new resources,
inputs,
processes,
marketing arrangemts,
 asset tenure arrangemts
Term

Lec 3

What do we look for when accumulating new investments?

Definition
 
Accumulating new “investments” with higher-than-average rates of return; not necessarily financial investmts
 
Such investments can come from any source, region, industry; impossible to predict source of such investments
 
Not necessarily from agriculture, industry, natural resources, from private or public sector
Term

Lec 3

 

According to Shultz what is growth a process of?

Definition
 
Growth is process of accumulating “inexpensive income streams” (or high payoff investments)
Term

Lec 3

 

 

What does Cheaper income streams in terms or returns to investments?
Definition
 
higher rate of return on the investment
 
-If the investment earns 10%/year, you would need an investment amount (principal) of $1000.
 
-If the investment earns 20%/yr, you would need an investment amount of $500
Term
Lec 3 
When is rate of return higher than average?
Definition
 
 
Investments that have NPV>0 or Internal Rate of Return (IRR) > opportunity cost of capital (adjusted for risk)
 
Also Policy Changes where benefits>costs (calculated using welfare cost analysis);
e.g., where competition enhanced, public goods production enhanced, taxes on farmers reduced, subsidies reduced, externalities reduced
 
Improvements in Institutions that are efficient (less costly, deliver larger benefits)
 
Improved decisions or procedures in any of these three areas will increase or enhance economic growth
Term

 Lec 3

What is an insituttion and why is it important?

Definition
 
Definition:  agencies and rules and regulations that affect economic behaviour
 
-Too often forgotten or taken as given; they are important and they change
 
Development dependent on design and operation of economies institutions; growth enhanced by institutions that favour growth
 
Many missing institutions in ex-centrally planned economies:  legal and contract systems, trade rules and organizations (e.g., customs), commercial arrangements, food safety and grading, police and security, land tenure, banking and financial mechanisms
Term

Lec 3

 

What's traditional agriculture like?

Definition
 
no changes in technology, few other changes in institutions, social arrangements, slow rates of economic growth, overwhelming characteristic of equilibrium, little advantage in schooling, low rates of saving and low return to capital, low incomes
Term

Lec 3

 

 

modern agriculture?
Definition
 
technology changes regularly, many changes in institutions, social arrangements and policies, rapid rates of growth, no sense of equilibrium, high returns to schooling and capital, etc.
Term

Lec 3

 

 

What policy areas important for growth?
Definition
 
Agricultural and Industrial Policy
 
Environmental Policy
 
Trade Policy
 
Competition Policy
 
Labour Market Policy
 
Investment in People:  Education and Health Policy
 
Financial and Banking Sector Policy
 
Foreign Investment, Capital and Debt Policy
 
Science and Technology Policy
 
Infrastructure Policy
 
Macro Policy: fiscal, monetary and exchange rate policy
Term

Lec 4

 

Three Areas of Potential for economic growth
Definition
 
Investment Projects (Public Sector)
New Funds into Infrastructure (roads, transportation in general, communications), Research, Power, Irrigation
 
Government Policy
Taxes, subsidies, trade policies, regulations; all this usually through government departments
 
Public Institutions
Related to government but much broader set of organizations, rules and procedures, forms and details of arrangements
Term

Lec 3/4

 

Name some types of institutions

Definition
 
Legal and contract systems
Trade rules and organizations
Also customs administration
Investment regulations, commercial arrangements
Food safety, animal and plant health regulations
Food grading systems
Land tenure
Banking and financial mechanisms
Rural credit agencies and suppliers (including but not only banks)
Police and security
Issue of bioterror and biosafety now more important
Local governance, democracy institutions
Term

Lec 4

 

 

What pushes out the PPF frontier?
Definition
 
-Increased supply of inputs
 
-Improved technology or know-how
Term

Lec 4

 

 

there are three sources of growth revealed by PPF, two by pushing out the frontier, one by moving closer to the frontier: what are they?
Definition
 
Increased supplies of basic inputs (labour, savings or capital)
 
Improved technology or know-how of producing the commodities in question
 
Improving the efficiency of the economy (moving closer to the frontier)
Term

Lec 5

 

 

Suggested policy guidelines: industry
Definition
 
No industry subsidies or specific industry taxation
 
Attention to Research &
Development (Science Policy)
 
Minimal protection from Border policy
 
Attention to environmental policy and externalities
Term

Lec 5

 

 

Suggested policy guidelines: environment
Definition
 
Identify externalities and choose/design best policies
 
Identify government policy that encourages degradation
 
Identify public good problems and devise best policies
Term

Lec 5

 

 

Suggested Policy trade?
Definition
 
Shift from NTBs to tariffs
 
Steady reduction in tariffs
 
Remove export subsidies (and taxes)
 
Minimize exceptions
Term

Lec 5

 

 

Suggested Policy Competition
Definition
 
Enhance competition by anti-monopoly policies against monopoly practices, structure, monitoring mergers
Term

Lec 5

 

 

Suggested Policy
Definition
Term

Lec 5

 

 

Suggested Policy:  
Labour Market Policy
Definition
 
Minimize restrictions on competitive labour market; enhance mobility
Term
 
Lec 5 
Suggested Policy  
Human Capital and Health Policies
Definition
Invest in education broadly by level and region
 
Encourage shift to higher quality education
 
Details:  up to country circumstances, with goal of widespread increase in enrollments and quality educatn
 
Health care investment broadly, in all regions
 
Details up to country situation:  goals are good public health and basic standards, adequate hospital care, food safety
Term

Lec 5 

Suggested Policy  

Financial and Banking Sector

Definition
 
Financial and Banking Sector
Public regulations on prudential standards
Competition in sector; regulation re bank assets and solvency (good quality balance sheets); ability to withstand income downfalls, currency depreciations
Term

Lec 5 

Suggested Policy  

 

Foreign Investment, Capital and Debt Policy
Definition
 
Foreign Investment, Capital and Debt Policy
Tricky balancing act to encourage foreign investment as source of capital, technology but form of Inv?, below…
 
Extent of foreign investment?  Instability in capital flows, Debt structure of domestic and foreign firms, Fair taxation and collection
Term

Lec 5 

Suggested Policy  

 

 

Science and Technology Policy
Definition
 
Science and Technology Policy
Adequate research and development, public sector and private sector
Related to Education policy for graduate study at Univ.
Gets into patents and intellectual property policies
Term

Lec 5

 

Suggested policy:

 

 

Infrastructure
Definition
 
Infrastructure
Project funding
Private sector too (toll roads)
Maintenance and repair in addition to new investments
Term

Lec 5

 

 

Policy Elements 6:  Macro Policy
Definition
 
Interest rates (monetary policy)
 
Economic growth (full employment goal, many tools both micro and macro)
 
Exchange rate: most important price in economy
 
Floating vs fixed or managed XR
 
When fixed or managed, overvaluation common
 
Implication:  hurts agriculture.  Why?  Who benefits, who loses?
 
Traded good sector vs non-traded goods sector
 
Importance of Dutch disease
 
Importance of capital flows in addition to trade flows
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