Essays on Modeling the Economic Impacts of a Foreign Animal Disease on the United States Agricultural Sector

Essays on Modeling the Economic Impacts of a Foreign Animal Disease on the United States Agricultural Sector

Author: Amy DeAnn Hagerman

Publisher:

Published: 2011

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Foreign animal disease can cause serious damage to the United States (US) agricultural sector and foot-and-mouth disease (FMD), in particular, poses a serious threat. FMD causes death and reduced fecundity in infected animals, as well as significant economic consequences. FMD damages can likely be reduced through implementing pre-planned response strategies. Empirical studies have evaluated the economic consequences of alternative strategies, but typically employ simplified models. This dissertation seeks to improve US preparedness for avoiding and/or responding to an animal disease outbreak by addressing three issues related to strategy assessment in the context of FMD: integrated multi region economic and epidemic evaluation, inclusion of risk, and information uncertainty. An integrated economic/epidemic evaluation is done to examine the impact of various control strategies. This is done by combining a stochastic, spatial FMD simulation model with a national level, regionally disaggregated agricultural sector mathematical programming economic model. In the analysis, strategies are examined in the context of California's dairy industry. Alternative vaccination, disease detection and movement restriction strategies are considered as are trade restrictions. The results reported include epidemic impacts, national economic impacts, prices, regional producer impacts, and disease control costs under the alternative strategies. Results suggest that, including trade restrictions, the median national loss from the disease outbreak is as much as $17 billion when feed can enter the movement restriction zone. Early detection reduces the median loss and the standard deviation of losses. Vaccination does not reduce the median disease loss, but does have a smaller standard deviation of loss which would indicate it is a risk reducing strategy. Risk in foreign animal disease outbreaks is present from several sources; however, studies comparing alternative control strategies assume risk neutrality. In reality, there will be a desire to minimize the national loss as well as minimize the chance of an extreme outcome from the disease (i.e. risk aversion). We perform analysis on FMD control strategies using breakeven risk aversion coefficients in the context of an outbreak in the Texas High Plains. Results suggest that vaccination while not reducing average losses is a risk reducing strategy. Another issue related to risk and uncertainty is the response of consumers and domestic markets to the presence of FMD. Using a highly publicized possible FMD outbreak in Kansas that did not turn out to be true, we examine the role of information uncertainty in futures market response. Results suggest that livestock futures markets respond to adverse information even when that information is untrue. Furthermore, the existence of herding behavior and potential for momentum trading exaggerate the impact of information uncertainty related to animal disease.


Economic Impacts of Foreign-source Animal Disease

Economic Impacts of Foreign-source Animal Disease

Author: Jace R. Corder

Publisher:

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781607416012

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This book presents a modelling framework in which epidemiological model results are integrated with an economic model of the U.S. agricultural sector to enable estimation of the economic impacts of outbreaks of foreign-source livestock diseases. To demonstrate the model, the study assessed results of a hypothetical outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). The modelling framework includes effects of the FMD episode on all major agricultural products and assesses these effects on aggregate supply, demand, and trade over 16 quarters. Model results show a potential for large trade-related losses for beef, beef cattle, hogs, and pork, though relatively few animals are destroyed. This model is more comprehensive than previous work because it has components for modelling both economic effects and disease-spread effects from an outbreak, for which the results can be integrated. It also assesses the effects of a disease outbreak on major agricultural sectors- livestock and crops- along vertical market chains, from production to consumption. Thirdly, it projects the impact of the disease outbreak over 20 calendar quarters, rather than for just one year.


Essays on the Global Burden of Animal Diseases

Essays on the Global Burden of Animal Diseases

Author: Mohammad Maksudur Rahman

Publisher:

Published: 2023

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This dissertation comprises three studies investigating the global impacts of animal diseases on trade, production, and human and animal health expenditures. In the first essay, we identify and quantify the global impacts of Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) outbreaks on meat exports using panel data from 178 World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH) member countries from 1996 to 2016. We adopt a causal inference approach that considers animal disease outbreaks over time as non-staggered binary treatments with the potential for switching in (new outbreak) and out of treatment (recovery) within the sample period. Using a recently proposed dynamic DID estimator robust to group and time heterogeneity, we estimate the treatment effects that decompose into 'post-infection' and 'post-recovery' effects. We find the outbreak decreases meat export by 24% - 36% of mean annual meat export in the five years following an outbreak, which is brought about by a decline in the joiners' meat exports, while the leavers do not recover the export losses even after five years. The average effect is estimated at about 54,000 tons per outbreak, resulting in an export revenue loss of $143 million. The asymmetric post-infection and post-recovery trade losses imply a significant disease burden on the endemic regions.FMD outbreaks cause animal morbidity and mortality, resulting in production loss and loss of income and livelihood. In the second essay, we estimate the global impacts of FMD outbreaks on production. We adopt a two-stage Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) method to estimate changes in global agricultural and livestock total factor productivity (TFP) for 178 countries during 1996 - 2016. In the first stage, we use DEA to estimate the Malmquist TFP index and the Malmquist-Luenberger TFP index for the agriculture and livestock sectors, respectively. In the second stage, we use a difference-in-differences (DID) estimator to identify the changes in TFP after an outbreak. The causal model shows a delayed impact of disease events on overall agricultural TFP. On average, an outbreak causes a 30% lower productivity growth in the newly disease-affected countries compared to the annual productivity growth of never affected countries. Decomposition into different components reveals that a lower technical efficiency growth in the affected regions contributes to the lower TFP growth.Endemic zoonoses cause a dual burden of increased health costs for humans and animals and reduced income and livelihoods, especially in livestock-dependent rural households. In the third essay, we investigate the factors determining the household's willingness to pay (WTP) for disease mitigation services for animals and humans. Using a cross-sectional survey of 71 households in northern Tanzania, we conduct choice experiments to elicit disease mitigation preferences for anthrax in animals and humans. We specify a random utility framework and estimate a single-bounded logistic regression model. Results show that the respondents are reluctant to adopt any disease mitigation measure with lower efficacy for anthrax, be it for animals or humans. There is also high price sensitivity across animal and human health expenditure choices. When price level variations are accounted for, the respondents choose lower-cost disease mitigation measures such as animal vaccination and outpatient treatments for humans. High uptake in low-cost alternatives imply potential for the private market-based provision of disease mitigation services, while public support, such as subsidies and price support, may facilitate the success of disease mitigation strategies.


Emerging Animal Diseases

Emerging Animal Diseases

Author: National Research Council

Publisher: National Academies Press

Published: 2002-09-05

Total Pages: 54

ISBN-13: 0309084687

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Recent outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in Europe and Japan set off alarm bells in the United States and other nations, prompting a flurry of new regulations, border controls, inspections, and other activities to prevent incursions of the diseases. The terrorist attacks in New York City and Washington, DC, added a new note of urgency to the alarm. Concerned about additional acts of terror or sabotage in various sectors of the economy, including agriculture, U.S. government and industry officials have begun to reevaluate emergency management plans in response to these threats and to shift the focus of research and planning. More than 200 representatives of government, industry, academia, and nongovernmental organizations gathered at a one-day workshop in Washington, DC, on January 15, 2002, to assess what the United States is doing about emerging animal diseases and related issues and to explore what still needs to be done. Major objectives of the workshop include: (1) elucidating information on the U.S. position with regard to potentially threatening animal diseases; (2) identifying critical problems, barriers, and data gaps; and (3) defining potential future National Academies' activities. Emerging Animal Diseases describes the issues presented and discussed by the workshop participants. This report summary extracts the key technical issues from the presentations and discussions, rather than presenting each session and panel discussion separately. Many issues were touched upon repeatedly by several speakers in different sessions, and this format is intended to allow readers who did not attend the workshop to have a good understanding of the discussions in the context of the entire workshop.


The Economics of Livestock Disease Insurance

The Economics of Livestock Disease Insurance

Author: Stephen R. Koontz

Publisher: CABI

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 284

ISBN-13: 0851990770

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This book on the economics of livestock disease insurance is organized into three major parts. Following an introduction (chapters 1-2), part II (chapters 3-8) includes a variety of discussions about what is known about how to build a livestock insurance programme. It begins with a look at the conceptual basis for government involvement in the management of livestock diseases, including prevention, control, regulation and eradication. This discussion is picked up by looking at incentive compatibility and insurability conditions in the private sector, emphasizing how livestock disease management is unique. Compensation is also examined, including what losses should be compensated, choosing a method to value the losses, determining the portion of losses to compensate, and outlining a potential role for insurance. Finally, the complexity of the risks at the farm level is demonstrated using a model that evaluates revenue insurance. Part III (chapters 9-20) offers a diverse discussion about disease management issues and programmes in Australia, Canada, Europe and the USA. These chapters include more discussion about how to build economically sound insurance programmes, and observations are based on modelling or observing case studies. The book has a subject index.


Assessment of U.S. Agriculture Sector and Human Vulnerability to a Rift Valley Fever Outbreak

Assessment of U.S. Agriculture Sector and Human Vulnerability to a Rift Valley Fever Outbreak

Author: Randi Catherine Hughes

Publisher:

Published: 2011

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Foreign animal disease outbreaks can cause substantial economic losses. Policy makers need information on both the vulnerability of the food supply to disease epidemics and the impacts of alternative protection actions. This research focused on the assessment of the U.S. agricultural sector and human vulnerability to a Rift Valley Fever (RVF) outbreak and the value of a select set of alternative disease control strategies. RVF is a vector-borne, zoonotic disease that affects both livestock and humans; thus both animal and human consequences of an outbreak were examined. This research was conducted in two parts. Livestock impact assessment used an integrated epidemic/economic model to examine the extent of RVF spread in the animal population and its consequences plus the outcome of implementing two different control strategies: emergency vaccination and larvicide vector control. The number of infected, aborted, and dead animals is best controlled by coupling vaccination along with larvicide, but results in the second highest median national welfare loss. Therefore, careful decisions must be made as to what actions should be taken. Total national producer welfare is reduced with each scenario, and is more severe than the total national welfare loss (producer, consumer, and processor together). Consumer welfare is increased with each scenario due to a drop in prices of some commodities, and in some instances, an increase in supply as well. The majority of the national welfare loss can be attributed to the producers' and processors' loss in welfare. The highest damages are seen in the regions of the outbreak such as the South Central (SC). Other regions such as the Corn Belt, Lake States, and South East regions also see high damages due to price changes. The outbreak did not have substantial price effect on dairy products, but did have noticeable price changes for live cattle such as heifer calves, stocked yearling, and dairy calves. Prices for substitutes such as pork, chicken, and turkey experienced a price reduction, which can also be a factor resulting in consumer welfare gains. Human impact assessment utilized an inferential procedure for estimating the human consequences which comprise of a cost of illness calculation to assess the dollar cost of human illnesses and deaths, as well as a Disability Adjusted Life Year calculation to give an estimate of the burden of disease on public health as a whole. With potential costs above $2 billion for human illness, and with this number not accounting for loss or damages to other sectors of the economy, it can be highly probable that investing in a human vaccination campaign can be cost-effective and possibly cost-reducing. This cost along with the economic loss of the agriculture sector suggests substantial potential losses to the U.S. if this hypothetical situation were to become reality. Combining total loss estimates from the cost of illness and ASM models, potential damage of a RVF outbreak could range from 121 million to 2.3 billion US 2010$. The results of this study show the economic damages of an outbreak in the livestock population being much greater relative to the outbreak in the human population (roughly 16 times greater). It should be pointed out that both cost estimates are most likely under estimated. The animal outbreak is not incorporating all susceptible livestock (e.g. hogs and goats), and the human illness is not incorporating other damages to society (e.g. damages due to loss of tourism). By providing estimates on the potential economic outcomes, policy makers can better choose where, when, and how to invest their resources.


Local Food Systems; Concepts, Impacts, and Issues

Local Food Systems; Concepts, Impacts, and Issues

Author: Steve Martinez

Publisher: DIANE Publishing

Published: 2010-11

Total Pages: 87

ISBN-13: 1437933629

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This comprehensive overview of local food systems explores alternative definitions of local food, estimates market size and reach, describes the characteristics of local consumers and producers, and examines early indications of the economic and health impacts of local food systems. Defining ¿local¿ based on marketing arrangements, such as farmers selling directly to consumers at regional farmers¿ markets or to schools, is well recognized. Statistics suggest that local food markets account for a small, but growing, share of U.S. agricultural production. For smaller farms, direct marketing to consumers accounts for a higher percentage of their sales than for larger farms. Charts and tables.


Modeling Economic Resilience and Animal Disease Outbreaks in the Texas High Plains

Modeling Economic Resilience and Animal Disease Outbreaks in the Texas High Plains

Author: Hen-I. Lin

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) could have a significant impact on the U.S. agriculture industry and the welfare of U.S. producers and U.S. consumers. In order to address the potential impact from animal disease outbreaks, this project is designed to utilize a combined epidemic and economic modeling framework to evaluate animal disease management strategies which can be used to reduce the potential losses in an unusual event such as FMD outbreaks. In this study, we compare the welfare changes among three different parties with different strategies using, 1) ANOVA analysis; 2) cost benefit analysis; and 3) Risk Aversion Coefficient (RAC) analysis. Four types of index feedlots are selected in the study including, Feedlot Type 1 (> 50,000 heads of animals), Feedlot Type 4 (backgrounder feedlot), Large Beef Grazing (>100 heads of animals), and Backyard (