Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms

Global trends show decreasing global food security (measured by the ratio of food supply to demand) over the past years, but the future outcome is not something that can be defined based on statistical trends. Rather, there are non-linear dynamics that will eventually lead to a bouncing up back up...

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Main Author: Montesclaros, Jose Ma. Luis P.
Other Authors: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145773
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1457732023-03-05T17:23:14Z Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms Montesclaros, Jose Ma. Luis P. S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Meeting Urban Food Needs (MUFN) Conference UN Food and Agriculture Organization Social sciences::Political science Food Security Dynamic Simulations Global trends show decreasing global food security (measured by the ratio of food supply to demand) over the past years, but the future outcome is not something that can be defined based on statistical trends. Rather, there are non-linear dynamics that will eventually lead to a bouncing up back up of food production. This was uncovered by assessing how the current food insufficiency situation has developed, with the primary lenses of urban development, rural production, and price dynamics. Wages in agriculture have been consistently lower than those in industry and services sectors, leading to increasing migration to cities where the latter sectors are based. This migration has led to decreasing food production, as labor is required to till the agricultural land in rural areas. However, by this same mechanism, food scarcity increases, and the price of food eventually increases. Governments eventually find the need to give priority to ensuring food sufficiency for their constituents, as is the case in many developing countries wherein more funds are allocated for encouraging food production. This leads sequentially to an increase in wages in agriculture, migration back to agricultural jobs, and a bouncing back up of food production. However, the combination of 1) market failures shaping the allocation of resources, 2) investment delays from poor spread of knowledge of appropriate investments, and 3) delays in product delivery from producers to consumers, will prevent this bouncing back up from happening. The sooner these issues are addressed, the better the capability of the market’s price mechanism to mobilize actors. Policy recommendations showed three potential scenarios for the extent of time (in years) under which the urban food insecurity situation will be resolved. The fact that the problem remains to be a persistent one shows that the feedback loops for addressing it are not yet triggered; as such, the price mechanism is not yet functioning properly. The set of policy recommendations, derived from the causal analysis, may be applied to systemically improve the dynamics shaping the future of food security globally and by extension, in urban areas. Accepted version 2021-01-07T07:57:34Z 2021-01-07T07:57:34Z 2015 Conference Paper Montesclaros, J. M. L. P. (2015). Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms. Proceedings of the Meeting Urban Food Needs (MUFN) Conference, 1-33. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145773 1 33 en © 2015 The Author(s). All rights reserved. This paper was published in Meeting Urban Food Needs (MUFN) Conference and is made available with permission of The Author(s). application/pdf application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Political science
Food Security
Dynamic Simulations
spellingShingle Social sciences::Political science
Food Security
Dynamic Simulations
Montesclaros, Jose Ma. Luis P.
Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms
description Global trends show decreasing global food security (measured by the ratio of food supply to demand) over the past years, but the future outcome is not something that can be defined based on statistical trends. Rather, there are non-linear dynamics that will eventually lead to a bouncing up back up of food production. This was uncovered by assessing how the current food insufficiency situation has developed, with the primary lenses of urban development, rural production, and price dynamics. Wages in agriculture have been consistently lower than those in industry and services sectors, leading to increasing migration to cities where the latter sectors are based. This migration has led to decreasing food production, as labor is required to till the agricultural land in rural areas. However, by this same mechanism, food scarcity increases, and the price of food eventually increases. Governments eventually find the need to give priority to ensuring food sufficiency for their constituents, as is the case in many developing countries wherein more funds are allocated for encouraging food production. This leads sequentially to an increase in wages in agriculture, migration back to agricultural jobs, and a bouncing back up of food production. However, the combination of 1) market failures shaping the allocation of resources, 2) investment delays from poor spread of knowledge of appropriate investments, and 3) delays in product delivery from producers to consumers, will prevent this bouncing back up from happening. The sooner these issues are addressed, the better the capability of the market’s price mechanism to mobilize actors. Policy recommendations showed three potential scenarios for the extent of time (in years) under which the urban food insecurity situation will be resolved. The fact that the problem remains to be a persistent one shows that the feedback loops for addressing it are not yet triggered; as such, the price mechanism is not yet functioning properly. The set of policy recommendations, derived from the causal analysis, may be applied to systemically improve the dynamics shaping the future of food security globally and by extension, in urban areas.
author2 S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
author_facet S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Montesclaros, Jose Ma. Luis P.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Montesclaros, Jose Ma. Luis P.
author_sort Montesclaros, Jose Ma. Luis P.
title Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms
title_short Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms
title_full Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms
title_fullStr Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms
title_sort dynamic simulations of urban policies for sustainable food securitization : dynamics of urban development, agriculture sector growth, and price mechanisms
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145773
_version_ 1759854023869988864