International Commodity Policy

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A01=Hidde P. Smit
A01=Kees Burger
A01=Roland Herrmann
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Author_Hidde P. Smit
Author_Kees Burger
Author_Roland Herrmann
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CFF
commodity agreement evaluation
Commodity Agreements
compensatory finance schemes
Compensatory Financing
Compensatory Financing Schemes
COMPEX
developing economies trade
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
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eq_non-fiction
European Investment Bank
Export Earnings
Export Earnings Instability
Export Earnings Stabilization
export earnings volatility
Food Financing Facility
Grant Equivalents
ICA
ICCA
IMF
IMF stabilisation mechanisms
Income Transfers
INRA
International Commodity Agreements
international grain reserves
international trade policy analysis
ISA
natural rubber
New York cocoa exchange
Nr Market
price stabilisation policies
Relative Risk Aversion
STABEX Scheme
STABEX System
Sugar Protocol
Transfer Benefits
User Countries
Wirtschaftliche Vereinigung Zucker
World Market Prices

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032459196
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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For decades, instabilities on world commodity markets have been a central issue in the international policy dialogue. Price stabilization and compensatory financing schemes have been discussed and implemented as instruments to stabilize export earnings of developing countries and to counter the negative consequences of world market instabilities.

Originally published in 1993 and reissued in 2023, this book provides a quantitative analysis and evaluation of international commodity policies in the late 20th century. The authors investigate whether major international commodity policies have reached their primary objectives and to what extent they have had economic side effects. After reviews of the history and politics of international commodity policy, the authors deal with three important compensatory financing schemes: the Compensatory Financing Facility (CFF) of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the STABEX scheme of the EC-ACP Convention of Lomé, and the Cereal Import Facility introduced as an extension of the IMF’s CFF. Three commodity agreements, i.e. the International Coffee Agreement, the International Natural Rubber Agreement, and the International Cocoa Agreements, are then covered as are the commodity protocols for sugar and beef laid down in the Convention of Lomé. In a final section, the stabilization policies are compared and evaluated. The authors apply an ex-post approach when analyzing major commodity agreements and compensatory financing schemes. The measured impacts differ from those of ex-ante approaches based on models of a functioning price or earnings stabilization. A major reason is that existing policies were not strictly targeted at stabilization but contained strong redistributive elements as well. As a consequence, both compensatory financing and commodity agreements had only limited success in terms of stabilization, but individual exporting countries gained strongly from grant elements in compensation payments or from price-support elements in commodity arrangements. The book identifies the effectiveness of the implemented commodity policies from an international point of view as well as national interests in those policies.

Nearly 30 years later, volatile world commodity markets are still a major issue in the policy dialogue. Although topics, policy instruments and concepts have changed, this book remains a fundamental contribution to the study of international commodity policy. It will be of great interest to students of commodity policy and economic development and economists in national and international organizations dealing with market stabilization.

Roland Herrmann is Professor Emeritus of Agricultural and Food Market Analysis at Justus Liebig University, Giessen, Germany. Kees Burger, 1950-2016, was Associate Professor of Development Economics at Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, Netherlands. Hidde P. Smit is an Independent Consultant on Analysis and Forecasts for the Rubber Economy. He was Secretary General of the International Rubber Study Group in London and Singapore (2005 – 2009) and Head of the Economic Research Division of the Economic and Social Institute, Free University Amsterdam (1995-2004).

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