Cotton price change and welfare in Togo

This paper uses the evaluation of net benefit ratios applied to survey data on households to appreciate the effects of international price of cotton on the welfare of producers in Togo. It needs first to trace the difference between international prices and those paid to domestic producers. Further...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anani Nourredine Mensah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Firenze 2015-06-01
Series:Journal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development
Online Access:http://www.iao.florence.it/ojs/index.php/JAEID/article/view/295
id doaj-2798d004bc524a5a895d773db2bc2b11
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2798d004bc524a5a895d773db2bc2b112021-06-02T17:53:18ZengUniversità degli Studi di FirenzeJournal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development1590-71982240-28022015-06-01109110912210.12895/jaeid.20151.29597Cotton price change and welfare in TogoAnani Nourredine Mensah0FASEG, Universite de LomeThis paper uses the evaluation of net benefit ratios applied to survey data on households to appreciate the effects of international price of cotton on the welfare of producers in Togo. It needs first to trace the difference between international prices and those paid to domestic producers. Furthermore, given that households are producers of these goods, we use a revenue function that depends on the remuneration of labor, other earnings and profit that in turn depends on the price paid to producers and land ownership. For estimates, the effect of welfare, which is captured by the compensating variation, is the result of the share of the average cotton income in average total income multiplied by the change in the price of cotton. Our results with QUIBB 2006 and 2011 survey data reveal that the impact of a price change on the compensating variation gives a welfare change relatively higher for poor households. However, this effect remains low, considering whether a change in producer prices or in international price. A simulation of a potential effect of the change in the producer price of 50% of the differential of the two prices, and the positive impact on social welfare that results appears stronger. This positive change in welfare is reversely associated to the wealth of households.http://www.iao.florence.it/ojs/index.php/JAEID/article/view/295
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anani Nourredine Mensah
spellingShingle Anani Nourredine Mensah
Cotton price change and welfare in Togo
Journal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development
author_facet Anani Nourredine Mensah
author_sort Anani Nourredine Mensah
title Cotton price change and welfare in Togo
title_short Cotton price change and welfare in Togo
title_full Cotton price change and welfare in Togo
title_fullStr Cotton price change and welfare in Togo
title_full_unstemmed Cotton price change and welfare in Togo
title_sort cotton price change and welfare in togo
publisher Università degli Studi di Firenze
series Journal of Agriculture and Environment for International Development
issn 1590-7198
2240-2802
publishDate 2015-06-01
description This paper uses the evaluation of net benefit ratios applied to survey data on households to appreciate the effects of international price of cotton on the welfare of producers in Togo. It needs first to trace the difference between international prices and those paid to domestic producers. Furthermore, given that households are producers of these goods, we use a revenue function that depends on the remuneration of labor, other earnings and profit that in turn depends on the price paid to producers and land ownership. For estimates, the effect of welfare, which is captured by the compensating variation, is the result of the share of the average cotton income in average total income multiplied by the change in the price of cotton. Our results with QUIBB 2006 and 2011 survey data reveal that the impact of a price change on the compensating variation gives a welfare change relatively higher for poor households. However, this effect remains low, considering whether a change in producer prices or in international price. A simulation of a potential effect of the change in the producer price of 50% of the differential of the two prices, and the positive impact on social welfare that results appears stronger. This positive change in welfare is reversely associated to the wealth of households.
url http://www.iao.florence.it/ojs/index.php/JAEID/article/view/295
work_keys_str_mv AT ananinourredinemensah cottonpricechangeandwelfareintogo
_version_ 1721402483762266112