Abstract
As a staple food, rice has an enormous market in Bangladesh in terms of market participants and the volume of the product. As the price of rice is always a sensitive factor for producers, poor consumers and policy makers, this paper investigates market integration and price transmission along the vertical supply chain of rice. Johansen’s test of co-integration confirmed that farm, wholesale and retail prices are co-integrated in the long-run. A causality test revealed that prices were found to be at wholesale levels for both the upstream and downstream markets. The asymmetry error correction model (ECM) has discovered short-run and long-run asymmetry in price transmission in the vertical supply chain where both producers and consumers were being affected due to positive and negative asymmetry. Threshold autoregressive (TAR) and momentum threshold autoregressive (M-TAR) models have confirmed threshold co-integration as well as threshold effect on asymmetry in price transmission. The results highlight the inevitability of policy implementations and increased public interventions to reduce asymmetry for engendering greater pricing efficiency in Bangladesh rice markets.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Deb, L., Lee, Y., & Lee, S. H. (2020). Market integration and price transmission in the vertical supply chain of rice: An evidence from Bangladesh. Agriculture (Switzerland), 10(7), 1–21. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture10070271
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.