Empirical detection and quantification of price transmission in endogenously unstable markets: The case of the global–domestic coffee supply chain in papua New Guinea

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Abstract

Price transmission through global–domestic agricultural supply chains is a fundamental indicator of domestic market efficiency and producer welfare. Conventional price-transmission econometrics test for a theory-based spatial-arbitrage restriction that long-run equilibrium prices in spatially distinct markets differ by no more than transaction costs. The conventional approach is ill-equipped to test for price transmission when endogenously unstable markets do not equilibrate due to systematic arbitrage-frustrating frictions including financial and institutional transaction costs and biophysical constraints. We propose a novel empirical framework using price data to test for market stability and price transmission along international-domestic supply chains incorporating nonlinear time series analysis and recently emerging causal-detection methods from empirical nonlinear dynamics. We apply the framework to map-out and quantify price transmission through the global-exporter–processor–producer coffee supply chain in Papua, New Guinea. We find empirical evidence of upstream price transmission from the global market to domestic exporters and processors, but not through to producers.

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APA

Huffaker, R., Griffith, G., Dambui, C., & Canavari, M. (2021). Empirical detection and quantification of price transmission in endogenously unstable markets: The case of the global–domestic coffee supply chain in papua New Guinea. Sustainability (Switzerland), 13(16). https://doi.org/10.3390/su13169172

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