Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market

The global food system has become more susceptible to periods of extreme price volatility that impact on food security especially among the vulnerable groups. Highly volatile food prices subject market players to difficulties in planning ahead and adjusting to fluctuating market signals. This paper investigates maize prices volatility in two East African (EA) countries; Kenya and Tanzania. The exponential GARCH model was used on monthly maize price data for the period 2003 to 2010, obtained from national institutions of the countries. The findings show strong evidence that in both markets; price volatility is not prone to new market information (good or bad news) but sensitive to market events. Further, price volatility was found to be greater and more persistent in Kenya than in Tanzania throughout the period under investigation. Interestingly, price volatility in Kenya reduced significantly after 2005 when the country withdrew the import tariff on maize from other EAC member countries. The findings of this study show that prices of staples can be stabilized through increased cross border trade.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wambua, J.M., Massawe, Stella C., Wanjiku, J., Guthiga, Paul M., Ogada, M., Karugia, Joseph T.
Format: Poster biblioteca
Language:English
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2011-08
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/16666
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-16666
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-166662016-05-30T17:48:22Z Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market Wambua, J.M. Massawe, Stella C. Wanjiku, J. Guthiga, Paul M. Ogada, M. Karugia, Joseph T. The global food system has become more susceptible to periods of extreme price volatility that impact on food security especially among the vulnerable groups. Highly volatile food prices subject market players to difficulties in planning ahead and adjusting to fluctuating market signals. This paper investigates maize prices volatility in two East African (EA) countries; Kenya and Tanzania. The exponential GARCH model was used on monthly maize price data for the period 2003 to 2010, obtained from national institutions of the countries. The findings show strong evidence that in both markets; price volatility is not prone to new market information (good or bad news) but sensitive to market events. Further, price volatility was found to be greater and more persistent in Kenya than in Tanzania throughout the period under investigation. Interestingly, price volatility in Kenya reduced significantly after 2005 when the country withdrew the import tariff on maize from other EAC member countries. The findings of this study show that prices of staples can be stabilized through increased cross border trade. 2011-08 2012-03-19T16:03:36Z 2012-03-19T16:03:36Z Poster Wambua, J.M., Massawe, S., Wanjiku, J., Guthiga, P., Ogada, M. and Karugia, J. 2011. Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market. Poster presented at the First ISI Young Statisticians’ Meeting, Dublin, Ireland, 19-21 August 2011. Nairobi, ILRI https://hdl.handle.net/10568/16666 en Limited Access International Livestock Research Institute
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
description The global food system has become more susceptible to periods of extreme price volatility that impact on food security especially among the vulnerable groups. Highly volatile food prices subject market players to difficulties in planning ahead and adjusting to fluctuating market signals. This paper investigates maize prices volatility in two East African (EA) countries; Kenya and Tanzania. The exponential GARCH model was used on monthly maize price data for the period 2003 to 2010, obtained from national institutions of the countries. The findings show strong evidence that in both markets; price volatility is not prone to new market information (good or bad news) but sensitive to market events. Further, price volatility was found to be greater and more persistent in Kenya than in Tanzania throughout the period under investigation. Interestingly, price volatility in Kenya reduced significantly after 2005 when the country withdrew the import tariff on maize from other EAC member countries. The findings of this study show that prices of staples can be stabilized through increased cross border trade.
format Poster
author Wambua, J.M.
Massawe, Stella C.
Wanjiku, J.
Guthiga, Paul M.
Ogada, M.
Karugia, Joseph T.
spellingShingle Wambua, J.M.
Massawe, Stella C.
Wanjiku, J.
Guthiga, Paul M.
Ogada, M.
Karugia, Joseph T.
Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market
author_facet Wambua, J.M.
Massawe, Stella C.
Wanjiku, J.
Guthiga, Paul M.
Ogada, M.
Karugia, Joseph T.
author_sort Wambua, J.M.
title Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market
title_short Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market
title_full Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market
title_fullStr Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market
title_full_unstemmed Modeling maize price volatility in the East African market
title_sort modeling maize price volatility in the east african market
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publishDate 2011-08
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/16666
work_keys_str_mv AT wambuajm modelingmaizepricevolatilityintheeastafricanmarket
AT massawestellac modelingmaizepricevolatilityintheeastafricanmarket
AT wanjikuj modelingmaizepricevolatilityintheeastafricanmarket
AT guthigapaulm modelingmaizepricevolatilityintheeastafricanmarket
AT ogadam modelingmaizepricevolatilityintheeastafricanmarket
AT karugiajosepht modelingmaizepricevolatilityintheeastafricanmarket
_version_ 1779059023143763968