On the First-Round Effects of International Food Price Shocks : the Role of the Asset Market Structure

Develops a tractable small open-economy model to study the first-round effects of international food price shocks in developing countries

Abstract

The authors develop a tractable small open-economy model to study the first-round effects of international food price shocks in developing countries. We define first-round effects as changes in headline inflation that, holding core inflation constant, help implement relative price adjustments. The model features 3 goods (food, a generic traded good and a non-traded good), varying degrees of tradability of the food basket, and alternative international asset market structures (complete and incomplete markets, and financial autarky).

First-round effects depend crucially on the asset market structure and the different transmission mechanisms they trigger. Under complete markets, inter-temporal substitution prevails, making the inflationary impact of international food prices proportional to the food share in consumption, which in developing economies is typically large. Under financial autarky, the income channel is dominant, and first-round effects are instead proportional to the country鈥檚 food balance鈥攖he difference between the country鈥檚 food endowment and its consumption鈥攚hich in developing countries is typically small. The latter result holds regardless of the degree of food tradability. Incomplete markets yield a combination of the two extremes. Their results cast some doubt on the view that international food price shocks are inherently inflationary in developing countries.

This work is part of the 鈥楳acroeconomics in Low-income countries鈥� programme

Citation

Rafael Portillo, Luis-Felipe Zanna (2015) On the First-Round Effects of International Food Price Shocks : the Role of the Asset Market Structure. IMF Working Paper No. 15/33

Updates to this page

Published 23 April 2019