Part I
An Overview
1
The Political Economy of Food Price Policy
An Overview
Per Pinstrup-Andersen
1.1 Introduction
How do governments respond to abrupt food price changes and why do they
respond as they do? Answers to these two questions are important to help us
understand policy-making, to predict how policy makers are likely to respond
to future food price volatility and to support policy makers as they confront
such volatility. This book, which is based on a three-year research project, pro-
vides such answers for fourteen developing countries, the European Union,
and the USA. Syntheses across country studies draw lessons expected to be
useful among and beyond the study-countries. The project was undertaken
by a network of researchers, including the chapter authors, supported by three
senior advisors (Philip Abbott, William Lyakurwa, and Robert Paarlberg)
and coordinated by Per Pinstrup-Andersen, Cornell University, and Project
Director with United Nations University World Institute for Development
Economics Research (UNU-WIDER); Derrill Watson, Cornell University;
Finn Tarp, UNU-WIDER; Danielle Resnick, previously UNU-WIDER, now
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI); and Henrik Hansen,
University of Copenhagen. The network researchers, advisors, and collabora-
tors met at three workshops and interacted frequently through reviews and
revisions of draft versions of the working papers posted on the UNU-WIDER
website. The chapters of this book are based on revised and shortened ver-
sions of these working papers.
Food price volatility since 2007 provides a natural experiment for the
research. While much has been written about the nature, content, and causes
of these food price fluctuations (e.g., Trostle 2008; Abbott, Hurt, and Tyner
Food Price Policy in an Era of Market Instability: A Political Economy Analysis by Pinstrup-Andersen