‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member Countries

Intra-ECOWAS trade and food evxports have been debated and given attention in recent years. The paper uses an analytical tool, called ‘products mapping’ following some methods, such as trade balance index, Balassa index and Lafay index to analyse comparative advantages in all 46 food items (SITC 0 +...

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Main Authors: Ivo Zdráhal, Nahanga Verter, Barbora Daňková, Jan Kuchtík
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mendel University Press 2019-01-01
Series:Acta Universitatis Agriculturae et Silviculturae Mendelianae Brunensis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://acta.mendelu.cz/67/5/1379/
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spelling doaj-8b338704acff45e2b4aede6922d7d2b22020-11-25T01:31:28ZengMendel University PressActa Universitatis Agriculturae et Silviculturae Mendelianae Brunensis1211-85162464-83102019-01-016751379139210.11118/actaun201967051379‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member CountriesIvo Zdráhal0Nahanga Verter1Barbora Daňková2Jan Kuchtík3Department of Regional and Business Economics, Faculty of Regional Development and International Studies, Mendel University in Brno, Zemědělská 1, 613 00 Brno, Czech RepublicDepartment of Regional and Business Economics, Faculty of Regional Development and International Studies, Mendel University in Brno, Zemědělská 1, 613 00 Brno, Czech RepublicDepartment of Regional and Business Economics, Faculty of Regional Development and International Studies, Mendel University in Brno, Zemědělská 1, 613 00 Brno, Czech RepublicDepartment of Animal Breeding, Faculty of AgriSciences, Mendel University in Brno, Zemědělská 1, 613 00 Brno, Czech RepublicIntra-ECOWAS trade and food evxports have been debated and given attention in recent years. The paper uses an analytical tool, called ‘products mapping’ following some methods, such as trade balance index, Balassa index and Lafay index to analyse comparative advantages in all 46 food items (SITC 0 + 1 + 22 + 4) in trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS as well as the world. The findings suggest that Nigeria has performed better in trading with other ECOWAS countries than in trading with the overall world market. For Nigeria and the world, the findings reveal that the country’s comparative advantages reduced from 12 out of 46 (12/46) in 1995 to 8/46 food products in 2017. The notable products that reveal comparative advantages and positive TBI are cocoa (SITC 072), crustaceans (SITC 036), fruits and nuts (SITC 057); and oil seeds and oleaginous fruits (SITC 222). Contrary to Nigeria’s trade with the world, the results suggest that the country’s comparative advantages in trading with ECOWAS countries rose from 19/46 in 1995 to 26/46 food products in 2017. The notable products that show comparative advantages and positive TBI are tobacco, edible products, maize and wheat. Inversely, food products with comparative disadvantage and adverse TBI, slightly reduced from 18/46 in 1995 to 17/46 in 2017. The findings further suggest that the structure of Nigeria’s food trade with ECOWAS has started involving and improving, albeit at a slow pace. There is an urgent need to stimulate domestic food production and food processing industries for domestic consumption and exports. Regional and national agricultural policies should be dramatically implemented for self-sufficiency and more comparative advantages and the number of positive TBI to be ensured and sustained.https://acta.mendelu.cz/67/5/1379/agri-foodcomparative advantagefood productsintra-ECOWASLafay index
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ivo Zdráhal
Nahanga Verter
Barbora Daňková
Jan Kuchtík
spellingShingle Ivo Zdráhal
Nahanga Verter
Barbora Daňková
Jan Kuchtík
‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member Countries
Acta Universitatis Agriculturae et Silviculturae Mendelianae Brunensis
agri-food
comparative advantage
food products
intra-ECOWAS
Lafay index
author_facet Ivo Zdráhal
Nahanga Verter
Barbora Daňková
Jan Kuchtík
author_sort Ivo Zdráhal
title ‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member Countries
title_short ‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member Countries
title_full ‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member Countries
title_fullStr ‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member Countries
title_full_unstemmed ‘Products Mapping’ and Agri- Food Trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS Member Countries
title_sort ‘products mapping’ and agri- food trade between nigeria and ecowas member countries
publisher Mendel University Press
series Acta Universitatis Agriculturae et Silviculturae Mendelianae Brunensis
issn 1211-8516
2464-8310
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Intra-ECOWAS trade and food evxports have been debated and given attention in recent years. The paper uses an analytical tool, called ‘products mapping’ following some methods, such as trade balance index, Balassa index and Lafay index to analyse comparative advantages in all 46 food items (SITC 0 + 1 + 22 + 4) in trade between Nigeria and ECOWAS as well as the world. The findings suggest that Nigeria has performed better in trading with other ECOWAS countries than in trading with the overall world market. For Nigeria and the world, the findings reveal that the country’s comparative advantages reduced from 12 out of 46 (12/46) in 1995 to 8/46 food products in 2017. The notable products that reveal comparative advantages and positive TBI are cocoa (SITC 072), crustaceans (SITC 036), fruits and nuts (SITC 057); and oil seeds and oleaginous fruits (SITC 222). Contrary to Nigeria’s trade with the world, the results suggest that the country’s comparative advantages in trading with ECOWAS countries rose from 19/46 in 1995 to 26/46 food products in 2017. The notable products that show comparative advantages and positive TBI are tobacco, edible products, maize and wheat. Inversely, food products with comparative disadvantage and adverse TBI, slightly reduced from 18/46 in 1995 to 17/46 in 2017. The findings further suggest that the structure of Nigeria’s food trade with ECOWAS has started involving and improving, albeit at a slow pace. There is an urgent need to stimulate domestic food production and food processing industries for domestic consumption and exports. Regional and national agricultural policies should be dramatically implemented for self-sufficiency and more comparative advantages and the number of positive TBI to be ensured and sustained.
topic agri-food
comparative advantage
food products
intra-ECOWAS
Lafay index
url https://acta.mendelu.cz/67/5/1379/
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