An econometric study of fats and oils commodities : with special emphasis on world trade /

Many studies have analyzed the economic dimensions of world

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Perera, Jayantha
Format: Thesis Book
Language:English
Published: [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified] ; 1996.
Subjects:
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Description
Summary:Many studies have analyzed the economic dimensions of world
fats and oils commodities. hi general, they tend to
concentrate on one oilseed and its by-products, a few
oilseeds and/or their by-products, and several oilseeds and
one or more of their by-products, but none of these studies
extend to consider all oilseeds and their by-products. While
most studies have acknowledged the importance of the
interdependencies in the fats and oils complex, they failed
to estimate the interrelationships of fats originating from
animals and from oils originating from plants and fish. This
study is an attempt to model the interdependencies and
interrelationships of oilseeds and their by-products with
major animal fats and oils. More specifically, this study
considered butter, lard, and tallow as important components
of the world oils and fats complex. The conceptual model
followed the general "market model" approach common to
agricultural commodities. The standard partition (fats and
oils demand block, oilseed meal demand block, oilseed demand
block, fats and oils supply block) of fats and oils
conunodities were incorporated into the market model.
Additionally, a systems approach was utilized to model fats
and oils consumption demand. Four demand systems (Rotterdam,
CBS, AIDS and NBR) were compared using a non-nested scaler
combination of systems. The selected demand system was
integrated into the beans/seeds demand system, oilseed meals
demand system and fats and oils supply system to create a
complete model of the world fats and oils economy. The CBS
system outperformed other systems individually and
collectively for the U.S. as well as the ROW. Therefore, the
CBS system was employed to estimated fats and oils
consumption demand. Three alternative policy scenarios were
analyzed. The effects of alternative policy scenarios on
U.S. oilseed production, crush demand, fats and oils
production, consumption, imports, exports, stocks and prices
were discussed. The model showed satisfactory performance
for soybean and corn policy scenarios. The failure to
capture policy impacts due to butter support price change
stems from the government involvement in the price
determination of butter over the past 30 years. The model
failed to capture the competitive nature of butter with other
fats and oils.
Item Description:Vita.
"Major Subject: Agricultural Economics".
Physical Description:xii, 333 leaves : illustrations ; 28 cm.
Issued also on microfiche from University Microfilms Inc.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.