The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economies

This paper deals with the dynamic response of exchange rates, inflation and agricultural foreign trade in Bulgaria, Poland and Romania to global food prices. We employ time-varying VARs with stochastic volatility to estimate the behaviour of these macroeconomic variables over the 2001M1–2015M12 per...

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Main Authors: Corina Saman, Cecilia Alexandri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University 2018-09-01
Series:Journal of Business Economics and Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JBEM/article/view/5208
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spelling doaj-4e2c6143c013418ca363e70fb26772402021-07-02T11:57:31ZengVilnius Gediminas Technical UniversityJournal of Business Economics and Management1611-16992029-44332018-09-0119210.3846/jbem.2018.5208The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economiesCorina Saman0Cecilia Alexandri1Institute for Economic Forecasting, Romanian Academy, Calea 13 Septembrie nr. 13, 050711 Bucharest, Romania; Institute of Agricultural Economics, Romanian Academy, Calea 13 Septembrie nr. 13, 050711 Bucharest, RomaniaInstitute of Agricultural Economics, Romanian Academy, Calea 13 Septembrie nr. 13, 050711 Bucharest, Romania This paper deals with the dynamic response of exchange rates, inflation and agricultural foreign trade in Bulgaria, Poland and Romania to global food prices. We employ time-varying VARs with stochastic volatility to estimate the behaviour of these macroeconomic variables over the 2001M1–2015M12 period. The original contribution of this paper is that it captures the time variation and nonlinearities of the relationship between variables taking into account food price volatility and its macroeconomic implications. The main findings of the paper are: (i) high global food prices were transmitted to domestic economies causing pressure on inflation in the long run; (ii) in the short run the impact of a positive shock in international food price increases domestic inflation, depreci-ates the currency and reduces the agricultural trade; (iii) the vulnerabilities to global food prices are more pregnant for Romania and Bulgaria; (iv) the difference in the transmission of world prices is related to the different status of the countries as regards food and agricultural trade. The findings of the research would be significant for the governments to promote policies to help farmers respond to the rising of food prices by growing more and responding to export opportunities that may arise. https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JBEM/article/view/5208food pricesinflationworld food price pass-throughagricultural tradeBayesian time-varying VARsstochastic volatility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Corina Saman
Cecilia Alexandri
spellingShingle Corina Saman
Cecilia Alexandri
The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economies
Journal of Business Economics and Management
food prices
inflation
world food price pass-through
agricultural trade
Bayesian time-varying VARs
stochastic volatility
author_facet Corina Saman
Cecilia Alexandri
author_sort Corina Saman
title The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economies
title_short The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economies
title_full The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economies
title_fullStr The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economies
title_full_unstemmed The impact of the world food price index on some East-European economies
title_sort impact of the world food price index on some east-european economies
publisher Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
series Journal of Business Economics and Management
issn 1611-1699
2029-4433
publishDate 2018-09-01
description This paper deals with the dynamic response of exchange rates, inflation and agricultural foreign trade in Bulgaria, Poland and Romania to global food prices. We employ time-varying VARs with stochastic volatility to estimate the behaviour of these macroeconomic variables over the 2001M1–2015M12 period. The original contribution of this paper is that it captures the time variation and nonlinearities of the relationship between variables taking into account food price volatility and its macroeconomic implications. The main findings of the paper are: (i) high global food prices were transmitted to domestic economies causing pressure on inflation in the long run; (ii) in the short run the impact of a positive shock in international food price increases domestic inflation, depreci-ates the currency and reduces the agricultural trade; (iii) the vulnerabilities to global food prices are more pregnant for Romania and Bulgaria; (iv) the difference in the transmission of world prices is related to the different status of the countries as regards food and agricultural trade. The findings of the research would be significant for the governments to promote policies to help farmers respond to the rising of food prices by growing more and responding to export opportunities that may arise.
topic food prices
inflation
world food price pass-through
agricultural trade
Bayesian time-varying VARs
stochastic volatility
url https://journals.vgtu.lt/index.php/JBEM/article/view/5208
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