An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare

Rice is a staple food in the West African nation of Sierra Leone with little difference in consumption between poor and wealthy households. Rice production is also an important source of livelihood with half of all households, three-quarters of rur...

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Main Authors: Graham, Errol George, Tchale, Hardwick, Ndione, Mamadou
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/385431598467472248/An-Optimal-Rice-Policy-for-Sierra-Leone-Balancing-Consumer-and-Producer-Welfare
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34386
id okr-10986-34386
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-343862022-09-20T00:10:36Z An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare Graham, Errol George Tchale, Hardwick Ndione, Mamadou CONSUMER SURPLUS PRODUCER SURPLUS WELFARE SUPPLY RESPONSE RICE PRICE DEMAND ELASTICITY SUPPLY ELASTICITY FOOD SECURITY Rice is a staple food in the West African nation of Sierra Leone with little difference in consumption between poor and wealthy households. Rice production is also an important source of livelihood with half of all households, three-quarters of rural households and about two-thirds of poor households grow rice. The final price of rice in the domestic market is an important policy issue. The policy challenge is complicated by the fact that poor households, which earn the bulk of their income from rice production, also purchase rice when own production is inadequate. Under the broad assumption that money income is a reasonable measure of well-being, this paper develops a simple model of the Sierra Leone rice sector and applies procedures to determine key outcomes in terms of domestic production, imports, and exports under conditions that maximize consumer's and producer's surplus. The paper finds that the rice sector is operating at a suboptimal level. In addition, simulations suggest that an optimal policy path to balance consumer and producer welfare and meet the higher societal objective of creating jobs requires a moderate level of tariff on imported rice, combined with structural policies to improve the productivity of the sector. 2020-08-27T14:52:09Z 2020-08-27T14:52:09Z 2020-08 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/385431598467472248/An-Optimal-Rice-Policy-for-Sierra-Leone-Balancing-Consumer-and-Producer-Welfare http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34386 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9369 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 Africa Sierra Leone
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CONSUMER SURPLUS
PRODUCER SURPLUS
WELFARE
SUPPLY RESPONSE
RICE PRICE
DEMAND ELASTICITY
SUPPLY ELASTICITY
FOOD SECURITY
spellingShingle CONSUMER SURPLUS
PRODUCER SURPLUS
WELFARE
SUPPLY RESPONSE
RICE PRICE
DEMAND ELASTICITY
SUPPLY ELASTICITY
FOOD SECURITY
Graham, Errol George
Tchale, Hardwick
Ndione, Mamadou
An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare
geographic_facet Africa
Sierra Leone
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9369
description Rice is a staple food in the West African nation of Sierra Leone with little difference in consumption between poor and wealthy households. Rice production is also an important source of livelihood with half of all households, three-quarters of rural households and about two-thirds of poor households grow rice. The final price of rice in the domestic market is an important policy issue. The policy challenge is complicated by the fact that poor households, which earn the bulk of their income from rice production, also purchase rice when own production is inadequate. Under the broad assumption that money income is a reasonable measure of well-being, this paper develops a simple model of the Sierra Leone rice sector and applies procedures to determine key outcomes in terms of domestic production, imports, and exports under conditions that maximize consumer's and producer's surplus. The paper finds that the rice sector is operating at a suboptimal level. In addition, simulations suggest that an optimal policy path to balance consumer and producer welfare and meet the higher societal objective of creating jobs requires a moderate level of tariff on imported rice, combined with structural policies to improve the productivity of the sector.
format Working Paper
author Graham, Errol George
Tchale, Hardwick
Ndione, Mamadou
author_facet Graham, Errol George
Tchale, Hardwick
Ndione, Mamadou
author_sort Graham, Errol George
title An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare
title_short An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare
title_full An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare
title_fullStr An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare
title_full_unstemmed An Optimal Rice Policy for Sierra Leone : Balancing Consumer and Producer Welfare
title_sort optimal rice policy for sierra leone : balancing consumer and producer welfare
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/385431598467472248/An-Optimal-Rice-Policy-for-Sierra-Leone-Balancing-Consumer-and-Producer-Welfare
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34386
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