Autarky in food: evidence and prospects.
Chaudhry, M. Ghaffar
I. INTRODUCTION
Without going into details which have been discussed elsewhere [5,
pp. 1-4], we would like to emphasize the importance of self-sufficiency
in food in terms of its direct contribution to more judicious use of
domestic resources and economic development, reduction of risks
associated with dependence on world food market, enhanced welfare of
consumers and producers, and, above all, saving of foreign exchange [7,
p. 263]. The present paper examines Pakistan's prospects of
attaining this goal. Since Pakistan's programme of self-sufficiency
in food has been synonymous with wheat self-sufficiency [25, p. 1], this
paper focuses on wheat alone. In line with its objective, the present
paper is divided into four sections. Section II reviews Pakistan's
achievements in self-sufficiency in wheat, beginning with the early
Fifties. In Section III, the emphasis is on Pakistan's prospects of
maintaining self-sufficiency in wheat. Section IV summarises the
conclusions and recommends policies for the future course of action.
II. A REVIEW OF SELF-SUFFICIENCY IN WHEAT
Pakistan at the time of independence, was basically a wheat-surplus
area [16, p. 20] and food deficits were unheard of in Pakistan until
1952 despite the falling wheat output and growing population. In the
period that followed, however, Pakistan faced persistent wheat
shortages, rising wheat imports and mounting financial burdens. It was
the growing acuteness of these problems that self-sufficiency in wheat
remained a goal of development planning in and after 1960. In reviewing
Pakistan's progress in this respect, this section compares the
intertemporal trend of wheat output with wheat consumption for necessary
inferences. In the absence of the relevant data, wheat consumption in
any one year was estimated with the following formulation:
[C.sub.t] = [W.sub.t-1] + ([M.sub.t] - [X.sub.t]) + ([D.sub.t] -
[A.sub.t])
where
[C.sub.t] refers to actual wheat consumption during any year
"t",
[W.sub.t - 1] equals wheat output for the year preceding
"t",
([M.sub.t] - [X.sub.t]) represents wheat imports net of exports
during the year "t", and
([D.sub.t] - [A.sub.t]) is the depletion of or addition to
government wheat stocks.
Based on the above formulation, Table 1 presents Pakistan's
status with regard to self-sufficiency in wheat for certain selected
years.
It is clear from Table 1 that Pakistan enjoyed varying degrees of
self-sufficiency in wheat in various years of the period under
consideration. From 1949-50 to 1954-55, Pakistan remained wheat-surplus
as is evidenced by the fact that during that period it imported very
little wheat, perhaps mainly for reserve. Pakistan's
self-sufficiency in wheat was considerably weakened between 1954-55 and
1964-65: domestic wheat output accounted for only 82.71 percent and
73.30 percent, respectively, of the total wheat consumption requirements
in 1959-60 and 1964-65. The bumper wheat harvest of 1967-68, thanks to
the Green Revolution, led to a drastic reduction in wheat imports--from
1.44 million tons in 1967-68 to only 16,000 tons in 1968-69 [20, p.
248]. Although this new development promoted official [21, p. 261], [26,
p. 4] and unofficial [10, p. 331] optimism for Pakistan's entry
into wheat exports, the self-sufficiency status achieved in 1968-69 was
short-lived as dependence on imports began to grow again: in 1974-75,
more than 14 percent of Pakistan's wheat requirements were met by
imports. Although dependence on imports from 1975-76 to 1977-76 was
somewhat lower, wheat imports reached a record figure of 2.24 million
tonnes worth Rs. 3.5 billion in 1978-79. In the subsequent years,
Pakistan's wheat production exceeded wheat consumption and resulted
in wheat exports and accumulation of wheat stocks [14, p. 66].
Although, for want of data, it is not possible to identify all the
factors that helped Pakistan to achieve self-sufficiency in wheat in and
about 1950, it is interesting to compare the mechanics of the
self-sufficiency in wheat in the late Sixties with that in the early
Eighties. Firstly, the self-sufficiency in the Eighties was accompanied
by critical shortages of edible oils and pulses which, of course, were
not present in 1968-69. This situation was caused by the then exclusive
emphasis of the government policy on wheat. Secondly, the
self-sufficiency in 1968-69 was achieved by a sharp increase in wheat
output and was accompanied by rapid increase in wheat consumption. By
contrast, the early Eighties were characterised by modest output
increases and stagnating wheat consumption. This implies that at the
current population growth rate of 3.0 percent per annum,
self-sufficiency in wheat, wheat exports and build-up of buffer stocks
in the Eighties were largely the result of falling per capita wheat
consumption. On the basis of the available empirical evidence for the
period under consideration, it is possible to conclude that while the
per capita wheat consumption in the Sixties increased at the rate of
3.5--10.7 percent per annum, that in the Eighties actually fell at the
rate of 1.2--4.3 percent per annum [5, p. 13]. In view of the continuous
rise in per capita incomes and the insignificant substitution of other
foodgrains and animal products for wheat, the fall in the per capita
wheat consumption appears to be paradoxical, but strict government
control of the wheat market, through its monopoly of procurement, and a
tight wheat-stock release policy may well be responsible for this fall.
III. PROSPECTS OF SELF-SUFFICIENCY
Pakistan appears to have become self-sufficient in wheat in recent
years. As reflected by the data in Table 1, the growth of wheat
production between 1949-50 and 1982-83 has slightly been in excess of
the growth of wheat consumption. Assuming that this long-term trend
could be maintained, prospects of maintaining self-sufficiency in wheat
in the future appear to be good. These prospects will be considerably
brightened if the government will continue its policy of restricting
wheat consumption. But, then, an indefinite continuation of such a
policy may be neither possible nor desirable, for, by restricting wheat
consumption, the government would create a large unsatisfied demand for
wheat, which, apart from clashing with the objective of attaining
self-sufficiency in wheat, will raise wheat prices, thereby causing
inflation, and create political unrest in the country, especially
because rising incomes will tend to further raise the consumers'
demand for wheat as a staple food.
On a priori grounds, changes in the growth of consumption of a
staple food commodity like wheat may be taken to be the function of
changes in the commodity's own price relative to the prices of its
close substitutes, rate of growth of population, trend of income
distribution, growth of per capita income and the grain's amount
required for seed and feed [10, p. 323, and 26, p. 3]. Although
population growth rate, income distribution and seed requirements are
unlikely to change significantly, wheat consumption growth rates may
well be considerably higher in the future than those in the past owing
to changes in other factors.
For example, against the long-term realized growth rate of 2.16
percent, the target of the Sixth Five-Year Plan is an annual growth of
3.5 percent in per capita income. At the prevailing 0.5-percent income
elasticity of demand for wheat, the annual growth rate of wheat
consumption is likely to accelerate from 1.08 percent to 1.75 percent
for this factor alone. Also, there is an increasing possibility of
greater substitution of wheat for other food grains because of the
stagnating production, and the consequently reduced availability and
higher prices of the other food grains. At the present level of
Pakistan's development, the importance of consumption and
production of livestock products is likely to rise and create a greater
demand for wheat as feed for livestock [12, p. 242, and 26, p. 3]. Also
important in this respect is Pakistan's objective of generating
significant wheat surpluses for export in the near future.
From the foregoing, it is not difficult to see that wheat
consumption in the future will increase at the rate of well above 5.0
percent per annum and that wheat production will have to grow at
precisely the same rate to permit a sustainable self-reliance. The
question then arises whether it would be possible for Pakistan to
realize a yearly growth rate of wheat output exceeding 5.0 percent in
the future.
If we look at Pakistan's past performance in wheat production,
we find that during the 33-year period under consideration, wheat output
grew at an annual rate of only 3.35 percent. If, on the basis of this
long-run growth rate, one were to assess Pakistan's prospects of
achieving the target growth rate of over 5 percent, one would find them
rather dim. But, then, it is also a fact that during the 15-year period
between 1964-65 and 1979-80, Pakistan had achieved a wheat-output growth
rate of 6.0 percent per annum, thanks essentially to the cultivation of
high-yielding varieties (HYVs) of wheat. It is thus manifest that if
Pakistan wishes to achieve a wheat-output growth rate of more than 5
percent per annum, it should intensify the cultivation of HYVs of wheat.
An expansion of the area devoted to wheat in the country would be of
additional help in this regard.
Is it profitable to expand the wheat area in Pakistan? Under the
present conditions, No; for wheat prices are lower than those of other
food grains. To induce farmers to bring additional area under wheat
cultivation, it will be necessary to maintain higher wheat prices
relative to the prices of other crops. Even if this is done, it may not
turn out to be such a wonderful solution, for it may have adverse
effects on the national economy. For example, it may (i) result in a
shrinking of the area under other crops, leading to their shortages,
(ii) somewhat reduce the already unsatisfactory food consumption of the
low-income groups, Off) exacerbate income inequalities by causing the
low-income groups to pay more for the wheat purchased from the
marketable surpluses of the high-income groups, and (iv) reduce
Pakistan's ability to compete in the international wheat market [5,
p. 27].
In view of the above limitations, Pakistan must, in the main,
depend on exploitation of the unrealized yield potential of the
high-yielding varieties of wheat, both existing and to be evolved, and
there seems to be a considerable scope for it. For example, it has been
argued in a number of studies that the actual wheat yields in Pakistan
are only 30-40 percent of the possible yields of the existing HYVs of
wheat [9, p. 406; 13, p. 12; and 24, pp. 1-5]. One of the implications
of these figures is that wheat output in Pakistan could be more than
doubled or trebled by simply tapping the yield potential of the existing
varieties. The possibility that new HYVs of wheat may be evolved in the
future promises even higher growth rates of wheat output in Pakistan.
The successful exploitation of the as yet unrealized yield
potential of the existing HYVs of wheat and the potential to be created
in the future is, however, constrained by a number of factors. The
studies on yield constraints, referred to above, all agree that low
fertilizer-application rates are among the principal causes of low
actual wheat yields, with poor water management, low quality seeds,
inadequate plant protection measures, prevalence of water-logging and
salinity and the continuity of outmoded cultivation practices being the
other major causes. It may be reiterated that while the actual
fertilizer-application rates are only 35 percent and about 20 percent of
the respective recommended rates in irrigated and unirrigated areas [22,
p. 30], the low rates of fertilizer application account for as much as
60 percent of the unrealized wheat-yield potential [24, pp. 1-5]. It
follows that the realization of the untapped wheat-yield potential would
not be possible without greatly stepped-up use of modern key inputs and
practices.
The use of modern inputs and practices may in general be promoted
by extension agents, mass media, institutional credit and by increasing
their profitability. It may, however, be pointed out that the success of
these approaches would in the ultimate analysis, be determined by their
demonstrated profitability. It has, for example, been averred that when
the price of fertilizer is far above the prices of farm products no
extension programme can induce farmers to use additional quantities of
fertilizer [23, p. 45]. It has similarly be remarked by Johnston and
Connie that application of chemical fertilizers would undoubtedly
increase unless there is a marked deterioration of grain-fertilizer
price ratios [8, p. 575]. These conclusions also follow from
Pakistan's historical experience. It has been claimed that the
stagnating wheat output during the Fifties and the early Seventies was
respectively the result of the policy of compulsory wheat-procurement at
less than world prices and a steep unilateral increase in fertilizer
prices without corresponding increases in the price of wheat [3, p. 6,
and 4, p. 4]. By contrast, wheat output registered unprecedented growth
rates during the Sixties, largely in response to prices which were
higher than those in the world market, and low prices of key
agricultural inputs. In the second half of the Seventies, the reduction
in the price of fertilizer and other agricultural inputs had a similar
effect on growth of wheat output.
Since the prices of the major agricultural commodities, including
wheat, and the key agricultural inputs have been controlled by the
government in Pakistan, the policy towards agriculture is of crucial
significance in determining the profitability of agriculture, wheat
output and the key agricultural inputs. It is rather sad that the
government, since 1979-80, has been pursuing a price policy that has
resulted in a progressive decline of the profitability of wheat output
in recent years in relation to key agricultural inputs and most
agricultural crops. For example, against the limited increase of only 28
percent in wheat prices, the retail price of a 50-kg bag of urea was
increased by 103.2 percent, from Rs. 63.00 in 1979-80 to Rs. 128.00 in
1983-84 [11, p. 34]. Depending on their brand names, price increases
varied between 150 percent and 530 percent in the case of liquid
insecticides and between 470 percent and 825 percent in the case of
granular insecticides over the period from 1979-80 to 1983-84 [17].
There has been a near doubling of water charges over the period under
consideration [27, p. 26]. The index of energy prices went up from
100.00 in 1979-80 to nearly 150 percent in 1983-84 [15, p. 157]. During
the same period, the values of the implicit price deflators for
agriculture, major crops and minor agricultural commodities amounted
respectively to 137.7, 136.2 and 129.1 in 1983-84 [11, pp. 14-21].
Although the price increases in the case of cotton and sugarcane almost
equalled those for wheat, paddy, potatoes and onion, procurement prices
were increased by 58 percent, 51 percent, and 55 percent, respectively,
between 1979-80 and 1983-84 [11, p. 40].
One of the consequences of the above price changes has been the
stagnation or even decline in the use of key agricultural inputs since
1979-80. The total consumption of commercial fertilizers fell from
1,044,000 nutrient tons in 1979-80 to 986,000 nutrient tons in 1983-84.
The annual increase in the number of the tubewells installed was only
4.5 thousand in 1983-84 as compared to 8.8 thousand in 1979-80 [11, pp.
33 and 37]. The consumption of the most commonly used insecticides in
1982 was only one-third of that attained in 1979-80 [19, p. 146]. (The
data on the consumption of insecticides in 1983-84 are not yet
available.)
From the foregoing, it is unmistakably clear that wheat output
under the current agricultural policy is bound to stagnate or, at best,
exibit only imperceptible increases. It may also be pointed out that an
indiscriminate use of this policy in the future would ultimately result
in Pakistan's loss of self-sufficiency in wheat, growing dependence
on wheat imports and the consequent deteriorating balance of payments.
Although it may be too soon to capture the full effect of such a policy,
complete stagnation in wheat output between 1980-81 and 1983-84 is a
cause for alarm and may in general be attributed to the faltering
agricultural policy of the recent years [ 11, p. 31 ]. It is needless to
add that self-sufficiency in wheat on a sustainable basis will remain
unattainable unless the present policy is seriously redirected to take
opposite course in the future. While what constitutes future course of
action is discussed in the next section, it is my earnest hope that the
recommendations will be of some value to policy makers for ensuring
self-sufficiency in wheat in the future on a sustainable basis.
IV. CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS
The purpose of the present study has primarily been to review the
past record of wheat output in the country and to assess Pakistan's
prospects of becoming self-sufficient in wheat. As for the past record,
Pakistan attained self-sufficiency in wheat in 1949-50, 1969-70 and
1979-80. Had it not been for the forced decline in per capita wheat
consumption, the self-sufficiency achieved in 1979-80 would have met the
same fate as that in 1949-50 or 1969-70.
The study has concluded that the desired growth rate of demand for
wheat is most likely to exceed 5.0 percent per annum in the future. In
view of the 3.35 percent annual long-term growth of wheat output,
Pakistan has only limited possibilities of retaining self-sufficiency in
wheat. Pakistan's prospects of self-sufficiency in wheat in the
future are further dimmed by the dismal growth performance of wheat
output (1.5 percent per annum) between 1979-80 and 1983-84.
This, however, is not to argue that wheat output is unlikely to
grow faster in the future. But quite to the contrary, there seems to be
a large unrealized wheat-yield potential which could be tapped for rapid
increases in wheat output. There is only a limited possibility of
realizing this untapped potential under the current agricultural policy
as it has led to the declining profitability of wheat production and key
agricultural inputs. As a consequence, the consumption of most of the
key agricultural inputs has been falling in the recent years. There can
be no denying the fact that rapid increases in the use of key
agricultural inputs can not be increased without stepped-up
profitability of wheat production through appropriate changes in
government policy towards agriculture. It is in view of this
consideration that this paper makes the following four recommendations.
Firstly, the current agricultural price policy which favours high
prices for both input and output needs to be replaced with a policy
which keeps the prices of inputs and outputs at a low level. It has been
argued that when the use of modern inputs is as low as that in Pakistan,
a low price policy for inputs is likely to be the most efficient way of
developing agriculture [1 and 2]. The policy of low prices for inputs
and outputs, unlike the current one, has no unintended adverse effects
on Pakistan's competence in wheat-export market, nutrition of the
poor, income distribution and inter-crop balances. In fact, the
recommended policy might help the small farmers in the use of modern
inputs and the poorer consumers in the improvement of their nutrition by
alleviating the resource constraints.
However, it is generally argued that such a policy might involve
huge subsidy bills and may not be desirable. That this is unlikely to be
the case has been argued elsewhere and is discussed below [7, p. 196].
Obviously the government's claim that agricultural inputs are
highly subsidized in Pakistan is based on the differences between import
costs and sale prices in the case of fertilizer and between costs and
receipts in the case of irrigation water. Such calculations, while
logical, however, may not reflect the facts on the ground as subsidies
may accrue to others rather than to the agriculturists. For example, in
view of Pakistan's self-sufficiency in fertilizer, it is illogical
to use import costs for calculation of fertilizer subsidy. While export
price would be more relevant in this case, its plain use without
adjustment for production losses at home would be equally wrong. One
appropriate alternative to the above approaches is the comparison of the
production costs of domestically produced fertilizers with sale prices.
On the basis of this comparison, it would seem that the government
provides no subsidy on fertilizer because the current retail sale price
of Rs. 128.00 per 50-kg bag of urea is considerably in excess of the
cost of production (Rs. 65-70 per 50-kg bag) of efficiently run domestic
fertilizer plants. While farmers pay a much higher price than the cost
of production of fertilizer, the difference is pocketed away either by
dealers, or by factory owners or by the government. The same holds in
the case of irrigation water. The current surge in recurring expenditure
on irrigation water is largely the result of revised national
pay-scales, remodelling of canals and canal headworks, construction of
dams, flood protection, and water-course improvement programme. While it
is not clear whether agriculture should be held responsible for the
increase in the recurring expenditure, which is really due to revision
of pay-scales, the expenditure, associated with the rest of the measures
has a long pay-off period in the future and only a small fraction of it
should enter into current costs.
Secondly, the present government practice of charging farmers
variously for the same amount of canal water supplied by the kind of
crops grown and by cropping intensity does not make for economic
efficiency of water use. Thus to think that raising of water charges
would lead to greater efficiency of water use is fallacious. Like the
allocation of water-supply the assessment of water charges, too, should
be on the basis of the canal-commanded area. As against the disincentive effects of the current intensity related water rates, the recommended
measure is likely to promote multiple-cropping both because of economy
in water application and because of greater profitability of alternative
sources of irrigation water.
Thirdly, in order to ensure low prices for key agricultural inputs
and commodities, there seems to be a serious need for retrenchment or
withdrawal of many costly public-sector programmes. For example, the
cost of production of government-operated fertilizer plants is 2-3 times
the cost of production in the private sector [18, p. 7]. The cost of
procurement operations is quite excessive: in 1980-81, it costs the
government as much as Rs. 7.79 billion. In the case of wheat alone, the
procurement cost in the same year was in excess of Rs. 4.47 billion [16,
p. 84]. It would be appropriate if the government-operated fertilizer
plants are transferred to the private sector and the government
procurement operations are restricted to only a few terminal markets.
Similarly, irrigation costs could be considerably reduced through
improvements in the efficiency of the irrigation department. The funds
so saved may be used for improving the performance of the organizations
dealing with agricultural research and extension for a proper and
regular supply and enforcement of new technology.
Fourthly and finally, although the above measures promise low
prices of agricultural commodities, the government should continue to
guarantee minimum prices in agriculture to safeguard the interests of
the farmers and consumers alike. Although the reduced prices of key
agricultural inputs in relation to the current prices of agricultural
commodities would ensure reasonable profit margins for agriculture,
future increases in the prices of both inputs and outputs should
strictly be based on cost-of-production studies In order not to impinge on farmers profit margins, increases in input prices should not be
allowed to surpass the increase in agricultural commodity prices.
Comments on "Autarky in Food: Evidence and Prospects"
It is a pleasure to have this opportunity to comment on an
important policy issue currently facing Pakistan. Dr. Ghaffar Chaudhry
has clearly made a major contribution in reviewing the past experience
of Pakistan in attaining self-sufficiency in wheat, outlining the
challenge for the future and identifying the policy choices that must be
made. With my limited experience of the wheat situation in Pakistan, I
have chosen to focus my comments on Pakistan's experience from an
international point of view and address three areas: (a) the need to
assess Pakistan's comparative advantage in reaching
self-sufficiency in different food items; (b) Pakistan's experience
in attaining wheat self-sufficiency in comparison with other countries;
and (c) the price-policy environment of Pakistan's wheat producers
in relation to world prices.
1. COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE AND FOOD SELF-SUFFICIENCY
First I should like to challenge the author's assertion that
self-sufficiency in food is desirable as a means of increasing national
income, saving foreign exchange, and increasing food security. I would
have been much happier had he mentioned the important principle of
comparative advantage. There are numerous examples of self-sufficiency
achieved in a basic food item at substantial costs in economic
efficiency and foreign exchange. And it is also easy to cite countries,
especially here in Asia, that have achieved high growth rates while at
the same time remaining heavily dependent on imported food.
Having said this, I should also add that I have little doubt that a
sound analysis would show that most areas of Pakistan have comparative
advantage in wheat production (especially in import substitution but not
necessarily for exports). However, this need not imply that a strategy
of self-sufficiency in other food items, such as sugar, oil seeds and
dairy products, would also have positive economic benefits.
2. SELF-SUFFICIENCY IN WHEAT IN PAKISTAN FROM AN INTERNATIONAL
VIEWPOINT
Now let us turn to the specific case of self-sufficiency in wheat.
By comparison with other developing countries, Pakistan has been quite
successful in increasing wheat production. Over the last two decades,
Pakistan has been one of a selected group of countries (with China,
Turkey and Argentina) where wheat production increased faster than
consumption, leading to reduced reliance on imports (see CIMMYT, World
Wheat Facts and Trends, 1983). For the rest of the developing world,
wheat imports have increased extremely rapidly at 10 percent per year
and more than doubled in the short period from 1970 to 1981. In this
same period, self-sufficiency in wheat for this group of countries
decreased from 60 percent to 38 percent of consumption. By contrast,
Pakistan was more than 85 percent self-sufficient in wheat for most of
the period and has been close to self-sufficiency in recent years.
Overall, wheat production in Pakistan has increased faster than the
average for developing countries while the growth rate of consumption
has been slightly less than the average. These figures are indeed a
credit to Pakistan's wheat industry.
However, Dr. Ghaffar Chaudhry introduces a disturbing statistic that suggests that the current self-sufficiency in wheat has been
achieved through a decline in per capita wheat consumption since 1977.
Given the rapid growth of incomes and stable consumer prices for wheat,
measured in real terms, it is difficult to accept his conclusion.
Possibly statistical sources have seriously under-estimated the amount
of wheat retained for home consumption or over-estimated the amount of
wheat consumed by Afghan refugees.
But, more important to the deliberations of this conference is the
likely trend in the future demand for wheat and its implication for
self-sufficiency. The author projects an increase in desired demand for
wheat of 5 percent annually. Given estimates of the income elasticity of
wheat in Pakistan and neighbouring countries, I would expect a growth
rate of closer to 4 percent annually. However, the rapid projected
increase in the livestock sector, especially poultry, will generate
substantial demand for feedgrains and given present price relationships
more wheat will be diverted to livestock feeding. Moreover, if
self-sufficiency is also equated with an improvement in the diets of the
poor and mal-nourished then this will also add to the demand for wheat.
But whatever assumption is used, there is little doubt that wheat
production will have to increase at approximately the same rate as in
the recent past. This increase will have to be based mainly on increased
yields since area expansion is limited by a slow-down in the expansion
of irrigated area and increasing competition from higher valued crops.
3. WHEAT PRICE POLICY AND INCREASED YIELDS
Undoubtedly the most controversial issue raised in this paper is
the assessment that current pricing policy is not conductive to
increased yields, and hence wheat self-sufficiency, and that a
re-emphasis on input subsidies, especially for fertilizer and water, is
the most efficient way to provide price incentives to producers and at
the same time protect the interests of consumers.
Let us first look at input-output prices in Pakistan in an
international perspective. A survey of wheat and fertilizer prices
across 25 countries in 1981-1982 showed that the ratio of 2.5 between
nitrogen and wheat prices in Pakistan was quite favourable in relation
to other major wheat producers. Since then, of course, the price of
nitrogenous fertilizer in Pakistan has risen significantly while there
has been only a small change in wheat prices. The current nitrogen/grain
price ratio stands at 3.5 and is somewhat higher than the rates of 2.5
to 3.0 which prevails in most large wheat-producing countries. The
differences arise, however, from a lower price of wheat in Pakistan
rather than a high price for nitrogen. It should also be noted that the
consumer price for wheat products in Pakistan is also somewhat lower
than average, suggesting a policy of maintaining low producer prices in
order to reduce consumer prices. At present both wheat and nitrogen
prices to Pakistan's farmers approximately reflect world prices,
assuming that Pakistan is an exporter of both commodities.
Given this background, I have to disagree with the author on his
recommendations for implementing a fertilizer subsidy. In the first
place, he presents little evidence that this would have a significant
effect on wheat yields without changes in other management practices
employed by farmers. Moreover, a fertilizer subsidy is not restricted to
wheat but has implications for the whole agricultural economy. It would
encourage more fertilizer use on a crop such as sugarcane where
incentives are already high because of a producer price set above world
prices.
I share Dr. Ghaffar's concern regarding the effects of
increased wheat prices on the poor. However, it must be remembered that
the current policy provides cheap wheat to urban consumers of all income
groups, at the expense of the rural sector where most of the poor live
and work. If the concern is with maintaining low prices to poor urban
consumers then there are methods of targeting consumer subsidies on this
group without taxing the rural sector.
It is, of course, true that average fertilizer application rates
and yields of wheat in Pakistan are lower than in most other countries
such as China, Mexico and Egypt, where wheat is largely grown under
irrigated conditions. However, improved price incentives are not the
only way to rectify this difference and certainly not the most
efficient. An alternative method of increasing fertilizer use on wheat
in Pakistan would be to increase the response to fertilizer through
improved management practices such as improved plant stands and better
weed control. This requires more efforts in applied research and
extension.
Derek Byerlee
CIMMYT Regional Economist, South Asia, Islamabad
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M. GHAFFAR CHAUDHRY *
* Dr. Chaudhry is Chief of Research (Economics) at the Pakistan
Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad. The present paper is a
shortened version of an earlier paper of the author presented at the
First Annual General Meeting of the Pakistan Society of Development
Economists, held at Islamabad from March 17 to March 20, 1984.
Table 1
Wheat Production, Wheat Consumption and Degree * of Wheat
Self-Sufficiency in Pakistan for Selected Years
Wheat Degree of
Production Wheat Self-
Years (000 M Tons) Consumption Sufficiency
Previous year (000 M Tons) (Percent)
1949-50 4038 4038 100.00
1954-55 3654 3654 100.00
1959-60 3907 4724 82.71
1964-65 4162 5678 73.80
1969-70 6618 6849 96.63
1974-75 7629 8906 85.66
1975-76 7673 8565 89.58
1976-77 8691 9198 94.49
1977-78 9144 10510 87.00
1978-79 8367 10413 80.35
1979-80 9950 10246 97.11
1980-81 10857 10826 100.29
1981-82 11475 11284 101.69
1982-83 11142 10945 101.80
Source: Adopted from [5, p. 8).
* Degree of self-sufficiency is the percentage of
wheat consumption met from domestic wheat production.