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Food Aid: Past, Present and Future*. Chris Barrett Department of Applied Economics & Management African Food Security & Natural Resources Management Program Cornell University * Based on book w/ Dan Maxwell, Food Aid After Fifty Years: Recasting Its Role. A Key Distinction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Food Aid: Past, Present and Future*
Chris BarrettDepartment of Applied Economics & Management
African Food Security & Natural Resources Management Program
Cornell University
* Based on book w/ Dan Maxwell, Food Aid After Fifty Years: Recasting Its Role
A Key Distinction
Food Assistance (also “food-related transfers”): - any intervention to address hunger and undernutrition (e.g., food stamps, WIC, food subsidies, food price stabilization, etc.).
Food Aid: - international aid flows in the form of food or of cash to purchase food in support of food assistance programs.
Key distinction: international sourcing of concessional resources in the form of or for the provision of food.
Issue is thus procurement as much as distribution.
Food aid was once a major foreign assistance tool (15-20% of total flows in the late 1960s - early 1970s), but now <2% of flows
Food aid accounts for little in the way of annual flows of food …
… and the share is declining, especially relative to commercial trade.
Program : subsidized deliveries of food to a central government that subsequently sells the food and uses the proceeds for whatever purpose (not necessarily food assistance). Program food aid provides budgetary and balance of payments relief for recipient governments.
Project : deliveries of food (usually free) to a government or NGO that sells (“monetizes”) part of the shipment to generate cash and uses the remainder for direct distribution to beneficiaries (e.g., FFW employees, MCH feeding, school feeding). Project food aid provides support to field-based projects in areas of chronic need.
Emergency/Humanitarian: deliveries of free food to GO/NGO agencies responding to crisis due to natural disaster or civil strife.
3 Types of Food Aid:
Global Food Aid Flows By Type
0.0
5.0
10.0
15.0
20.0
1980 1985 1990 1995 2000
Mill
ions
of m
etric
tons
Emergency
Project
Program
Source: WFP
There remain many countries with insufficient food availability to provide for their populations
Daily Macronutrient Availability Per Person(shaded areas below minima)
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000Calories
Pro
tein
(g
ram
s)
10.3%
2.9%16.6%
70.3%
Data source: FAO Food Balance Sheets
Minima: 55 g protein, 2350 kcal per person per day
The geography of food aid flows has changed over time, although US remains dominant.
A Quick History of Modern Food Aid
-Began in 1954 with Public Law 480 (PL480) in the U.S. The U.S. and Canada accounted for >90% of global flows through early 1970s, when the UN’s World Food Programme became a major player.
- Food Aid Convention agreed 1967, guides policies of 22 nations and EU, monitored through the Consultative Sub-Committee on Surplus Disposal.
- Rise of WFP since mid-1970s, decline of US PL 480. Move to multilateralism. EU/Canada move to cut program food aid and to decouple from domestic farm programs.
- Emergence of SSA and CEE/FSU as focal points and of CHEs and emergency food aid in 1980s/90s
- Rise of triangular transactions/local purchases since 1984.
US Food Programs, 1992 – 2002
N/A = not available or not applicable
ProgramP.L. 480 Title 1
P.L. 480 Title II
P.L. 480 Title III
Food for Progress Section 416 (b)
Bill Emerson
Humanitarian Trust
International Food for
Education and Child Nutrition
Year Begun 1954 1954 1954 1985 1949 1980 2003
Managing agency
USDA USAID USAID USDA USDA USDA USDA
Cumulative 1992-2002
budget (US $ billion)
$4.38 $9.62 $1.34 $1.33 $2.41 N/A N/A
US food aid remains largely driven by domestic farm and foreign policy concerns
…
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
US
fo
od
aid
(m
n t
on
s w
hea
t eq
uiv
.)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Year-
en
d U
S w
heat
sto
ck
s (m
n t
on
s)
1961 1971 1981 1991 2001
United States Food Aid Flows
Total US food aid flows(lefthand axis)
US year-end wheat stocks(right axis)
Data source: USDA
U.S. Food Aid Shipments to Russia(as compared against Peru)
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Mil
lio
ns
of
met
ric
ton
s
Data source: WFP INTERFAIS database
Peru
Russia
Yet, it is a myth that food aid provides effective support of US farmers, creates overseas markets or proves influential in foreign policy matters.
The Key Issues: 1. Additionality/ Efficacy
- what=s the metric we’re worried about? welfarist vs. non-welfarist criteria
- substitution of free or subsidized for purchased food (income elasticity of demand)
- ALeakage@ to nonnutritional uses (e.g., labor supply effects)
- food aid is typically concentrated on only a few commodities, esp. wheat. Micronutrient fortification limited, which may lead to problems in some refugee feeding situations where diets are limited (e.g., rickets).
- health effects of food transfers depends on complementary inputs: sanitation, preventive and curative care, maternal education, etc.
The Key Issues: 2. Targeting
- “Leakage” to nontargeted individuals in the household, region (errors of inclusion)
- Missing intended beneficiaries (errors of exclusion)
- Tough question: Is food assistance curative or preventive?
- Does food aid respond to need or bureaucratic inertia?
0 20000 40000 60000 80000 100000
Total Household Income (Ksh)
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
Pro
ba
bili
ty o
f F
oo
d A
id R
ec
eip
t
Va
lue
of
foo
d a
id r
ec
eip
ts (
KS
h)
Figure 5: Food Aid Targeting in Northern Kenya
0
500
1000
1500
The Key Issues: 3. Intertemporal Variability
- Aid should flow countercyclically to stabilize food availability:
* it doesn’t, response is small
- Food aid flows budgeted on monetary not physical basis
- Delivery lags
0 50 100 150 200Delivery lags (days)
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
Cu
mu
lati
ve p
rob
ab
ilit
y
PL 480 Title II Emergency Food Shipment LagsCall Forward to Port Delivery, 1999-2000
The Key Issues: 4. Direct and Indirect Costs
Direct costs
- procurement costs, incl. ~11% premia
- shipping costs (incl. ~78% premium!, delays and uncompensated labor)
- admin costs (incl. targeting and monetization)
Indirect costs
- fungibility premia (preference for liquid transfers)
- opportunity cost (could resources be used more effectively in other ways, e.g., on women=s education on health?)
- induced distortions in behavior (e.g., moving to distribution)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
Avera
ge s
hip
pin
g r
ate
s (
US
$/ton)
1991-93 1999-2000
US-flag
Foreign-flag
0.0
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
Labor S
upply
(m
illi
on
s o
f w
orkers)
0
25
50
75
Fu
ngib
ilit
y P
rem
ium
(%
)
0 2 4 6 8 10 Wage in white wheat kilograms per day
Figure 3.1:Estimated Aggregate FFW Labor Supply
cash (white wheat equivalents,read against left hand axis)
white wheat (readagainst left hand axis)
cash/wheatemploymentpremium (readagainst right handaxis)
Adapted from Barrett and Clay (2003)
- Food production and marketing (depends on additionality), including induced change in consumer preferences and relaxation of liquidity constraints faced by small producers and traders.
- Government policy reforms (food aid more often consequence of poor policy than either its cause or its cure)
- Labor supply
- NGOs: are the humanitarians being bought off?
The Key Issues: 5. Incentive Effects
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Per
cen
t o
f T
itle
II
foo
d a
id s
hip
men
ts
Target Title II Monetization Rate
Approved Title II Monetization Rate
Real ($) Sorghum Prices for Southern Somalia. 1998-2003
0. 00
0. 05
0. 10
0. 15
0. 20
0. 25
0. 30
0. 35
J an-98 J ul-98 J an-99 J ul-99 J an-00 J ul-00 J an-01 J ul-01 J an-02 J ul-02 J an-03 J ul-03 J an-04 J ul-04 J an-05 J ul-05
Month
Pri
ce i
n U
S D
oll
ars
Belet Weyne
Baar-Dheere
Luuq
Xudur
Baidoa
Average
Is food aid an appropriate form of food assistance?
1) What is opportunity cost?- Are alternatives an option given surplus disposal, nonwelfarist objectives?- How effective are other food assistance efforts in this setting? 2) Is food availability sufficient locally?- Can local food production and marketing systems respond to a demand increase fuelled by transfers? 3) What are proximate causes of nutritional problems?- Low income? High or unstable food prices?- Poor inter- or intra-household distribution?- Food choices (taste, preparation time, storage)? 4) Targeting capabilities: administrative, indicator, or self- errors of inclusion or exclusion, cost of administration 5) Are there positive or negative externalities?- Does it induce other, desirable behaviors by recipients at household- or state-level? (“food-for-talk”, school feeding and girls’ education)- Can it resolve other structural bottlenecks (e.g., backhaul, rural finance)- Production/marketing disincentives?
Ultimately, the only justification for food aid lies in two key roles.
(1) Short-term humanitarian assistance to food-insecure populations if and only if a problem of food availability underlies lack of access to food (especially where market failures prevent the usefulness of other forms of humanitarian assistance).
(2) Provision of longer-term safety nets, albeit under restricted circumstances.
Other (non-food) forms of assistance are likely to be better placed to respond in cases where there is not an underlying food availability shortfall and market failure, or when food insecurity is chronic.
Thank you for your time, attention and comments!