Asymmetric effects of rainfall on food crop prices: evidence from Rwanda
Journal: Environmental Economics (Vol.8, No. 3)Publication Date: 2017-11-01
Authors : Aimable Nsabimana; Olivier Habimana;
Page : 137-149
Keywords : asymmetric ARDL; climate change; food crop prices; rainfall;
Abstract
This study examined the effects of the likely change in rainfall on food crop prices in Rwanda, a landlocked country where agriculture is mainly rain-fed. The empirical investigation is based on nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag cointegration framework, which incorporates an error correction mechanism and allows estimation of asymmetric long-run and short-run dynamic coefficients. The results suggest that food crop prices are vulnerable to rainfall shocks and that the effect is asymmetric in both the short and long run. Moreover, there was evidence of seasonal differences, with prices falling during harvest season and rising thereafter. Considering the ongoing threat of global climate change, and in order to cope with rainfall shortage and uncertainty, increase food affordability and ultimately ensure food security throughout the year, there is a need to develop and distribute food crop varieties and crop technologies that reduce the vulnerability of farming to rainfall shocks.
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