Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply

In projecting global food demand to 2050, much attention has been given to rising demand due to the projected population increase from the current 7.4 billion to more than 9 billion. An increasingly important source of the increase in food demand i...

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Main Authors: Fukase, Emiko, Martin, Will
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/519861511794565022/Economic-growth-convergence-and-world-food-demand-and-supply
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28918
id okr-10986-28918
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-289182021-06-08T14:42:47Z Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply Fukase, Emiko Martin, Will CEREAL EQUIVALENTS FOOD SECURITY CONVERGENCE GLOBAL FOOD SYSTEM FOOD DEMAND FOOD SUPPLY INCOME DISTRIBUTION INEQUALITY In projecting global food demand to 2050, much attention has been given to rising demand due to the projected population increase from the current 7.4 billion to more than 9 billion. An increasingly important source of the increase in food demand is per capita demand growth induced by rising income per person. Since the proportion of income spending on food decreases as incomes rise, growth in global food demand will be greater if incomes grow faster in developing countries than in high-income countries. Such a pattern of income convergence has become established in recent years, making it important to assess the implications for food demand and supply. Using a resource-based measure of food that accounts for the much higher production costs associated with dietary upgrading, this paper concludes that per capita demand growth is likely to be a more important driver of food demand than population growth between now and 2050. Using the middle-ground International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Shared Socioeconomic Pathway projections to 2050, which assume continued income convergence, the paper finds that the increase in food demand (102 percent) would be roughly a third greater than without convergence (78 percent). Since the impact of convergence on the supply side is much more muted, convergence puts upward pressure on world food prices, partially offsetting a baseline trend toward falling world food prices to 2050. 2017-12-01T17:45:29Z 2017-12-01T17:45:29Z 2017-11 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/519861511794565022/Economic-growth-convergence-and-world-food-demand-and-supply http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28918 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8257 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CEREAL EQUIVALENTS
FOOD SECURITY
CONVERGENCE
GLOBAL FOOD SYSTEM
FOOD DEMAND
FOOD SUPPLY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INEQUALITY
spellingShingle CEREAL EQUIVALENTS
FOOD SECURITY
CONVERGENCE
GLOBAL FOOD SYSTEM
FOOD DEMAND
FOOD SUPPLY
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INEQUALITY
Fukase, Emiko
Martin, Will
Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8257
description In projecting global food demand to 2050, much attention has been given to rising demand due to the projected population increase from the current 7.4 billion to more than 9 billion. An increasingly important source of the increase in food demand is per capita demand growth induced by rising income per person. Since the proportion of income spending on food decreases as incomes rise, growth in global food demand will be greater if incomes grow faster in developing countries than in high-income countries. Such a pattern of income convergence has become established in recent years, making it important to assess the implications for food demand and supply. Using a resource-based measure of food that accounts for the much higher production costs associated with dietary upgrading, this paper concludes that per capita demand growth is likely to be a more important driver of food demand than population growth between now and 2050. Using the middle-ground International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Shared Socioeconomic Pathway projections to 2050, which assume continued income convergence, the paper finds that the increase in food demand (102 percent) would be roughly a third greater than without convergence (78 percent). Since the impact of convergence on the supply side is much more muted, convergence puts upward pressure on world food prices, partially offsetting a baseline trend toward falling world food prices to 2050.
format Working Paper
author Fukase, Emiko
Martin, Will
author_facet Fukase, Emiko
Martin, Will
author_sort Fukase, Emiko
title Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply
title_short Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply
title_full Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply
title_fullStr Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply
title_full_unstemmed Economic Growth, Convergence, and World Food Demand and Supply
title_sort economic growth, convergence, and world food demand and supply
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/519861511794565022/Economic-growth-convergence-and-world-food-demand-and-supply
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28918
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