OPEC-style cartel for the rice industry?

Saturday, May 03, 2008
by Geoff Riley

Two stories on the global rice industry attracted my attention last week. The perception that the surge in rice prices is good news across the board for rice producers is questioned by this article in the Financial Times which explains that the dramatic increase in prices is now benefitting smaller producers who have limited storage facilities, face rising costs and have little surplus production available to take advantage of the global price spike. There has been a noticeable increase in rice planting in countries such as Thailand, but by the time the fresh output comes to market, the price may well have fallen a long way from recent highs.

The rest of the article is here

The BBC reports today that Thailand wants to form an Opec-style rice cartel to give it more control over international rice prices. The article can be found here
Revision questions for students:

(a) Explain what is meant by a cartel and what its aims might be
(b) Briefly explain how a cartel might seek to stabilise the price of rice on world markets
(c) Outline the difficulties that a newly formed cartel might have in meeting its objectives

Print Digg it Del.icio.us My Yahoo RSS

Comments

High rice prices and the reaction to these may be a good illustration of Cobwem theories.

Posted by  on  05/03  at  07:48 PM

Sorry - COBWEB! Excuse my poor typing.

Posted by  on  05/04  at  06:55 PM

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:


Latest entries

Categories

Monthly Archives

Tags

inflation, recession, confidence, competition, housing, price, prices, demand, slowdown, dollar, credit crunch, property, china, expectations, food, incentives, consumption, sterling, supply, euro, usa, unemployment, profit, environment, trade, gdp, risk, externalities, emissions, debt, mortgage, investment, globalisation, supermarkets, commodities, wealth, costs, economist, deflation, taxes, downturn, environmental, exports, inequality, productivity, economic cycle, employment, welfare, retailers, macroeconomics, saving, monopsony, evaluation, pollution, airlines, interest rates, happiness, waste, poverty, innovation, efficiency, manufacturing, management, competitiveness, oil, carbon trading, behavioural economics, economics, stocks, copper, tim harford, climate change, regulation, population, sub-prime, newsnight, survey, crude oil, india, rationality, landfill, uk economy, federal reserve, balance of payments, monetary policy, us economy, labour market, market failure, economies of scale, lse, aviation, opec, agflation, government failure, contestable, cpi, currencies, taxation, ben bernanke,

Syndicate