Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sector

The demand for sheep meat in the populous central region around Mexico City has grown rapidly in recent years. To assess the impacts of potential “regional development” policy options, a dynamic model of Mexico’s sheep sector with regional and producer group disaggregation is developed that incorpor...

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Main Authors: David Parsons, Charles F. Nicholson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Cogent Food & Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2017.1313360
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spelling doaj-3b51b660f2c24282a15e462c951cac8c2021-03-02T15:42:31ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Food & Agriculture2331-19322017-01-013110.1080/23311932.2017.13133601313360Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sectorDavid Parsons0Charles F. Nicholson1University of TasmaniaCharles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, Cornell UniversityThe demand for sheep meat in the populous central region around Mexico City has grown rapidly in recent years. To assess the impacts of potential “regional development” policy options, a dynamic model of Mexico’s sheep sector with regional and producer group disaggregation is developed that incorporates interactions between herd dynamics, feed dynamics, market inventories of sheep meat and prices for sheep meat and animals. The model is used to assess the outcomes for commercial and tras patio (backyard, small-scale) Mexican sheep producers and sheep meat consumers of three growth assumptions and two intervention alternatives: a variable cost subsidy or the implementation of a stylized health intervention. Model simulations indicate that the dynamics of growth dominate the policy responses; the principal beneficiaries of producer subsidy and animal health interventions are Mexican sheep meat consumers. Commercial sheep producers will experience increases in cumulative net margin, but tras patio producers will be made worse off than they would have been in the absence of interventions. The Mexican sheep system thus exhibits two characteristics of dynamically complex systems: unintended consequences and policy resistance, with broader implications for interventions in agriculture-based livelihood systems.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2017.1313360complex systemslivestocksimulation modellingsmallholder farmerssystem dynamicsvensim
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Parsons
Charles F. Nicholson
spellingShingle David Parsons
Charles F. Nicholson
Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sector
Cogent Food & Agriculture
complex systems
livestock
simulation modelling
smallholder farmers
system dynamics
vensim
author_facet David Parsons
Charles F. Nicholson
author_sort David Parsons
title Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sector
title_short Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sector
title_full Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sector
title_fullStr Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sector
title_full_unstemmed Assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: A case study of Mexico’s sheep sector
title_sort assessing policy options for agricultural livestock development: a case study of mexico’s sheep sector
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Food & Agriculture
issn 2331-1932
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The demand for sheep meat in the populous central region around Mexico City has grown rapidly in recent years. To assess the impacts of potential “regional development” policy options, a dynamic model of Mexico’s sheep sector with regional and producer group disaggregation is developed that incorporates interactions between herd dynamics, feed dynamics, market inventories of sheep meat and prices for sheep meat and animals. The model is used to assess the outcomes for commercial and tras patio (backyard, small-scale) Mexican sheep producers and sheep meat consumers of three growth assumptions and two intervention alternatives: a variable cost subsidy or the implementation of a stylized health intervention. Model simulations indicate that the dynamics of growth dominate the policy responses; the principal beneficiaries of producer subsidy and animal health interventions are Mexican sheep meat consumers. Commercial sheep producers will experience increases in cumulative net margin, but tras patio producers will be made worse off than they would have been in the absence of interventions. The Mexican sheep system thus exhibits two characteristics of dynamically complex systems: unintended consequences and policy resistance, with broader implications for interventions in agriculture-based livelihood systems.
topic complex systems
livestock
simulation modelling
smallholder farmers
system dynamics
vensim
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2017.1313360
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