Dampening Agricultural Commodity Price Volatility in Civi-Strife-Torn MENA Countries: A Portfolio Theory Approach
30 Pages Posted: 6 May 2020
Date Written: April 11, 2020
Abstract
The Middle East and North Africa region is one of the most politically volatile and food insecure areas on earth. The sum of political upheavals and endemic food-security constraints has reduced many MENA nations to the equivalent of small, import-dependent countries. Such countries are especially vulnerable to commodity-price volatiltity, the focus of this paper. As MENA countries begin to arise from current civil conflict they must attempt to diminish the food-price risk that results from import dependence. This paper describes a constrained-optimization model that can produce optimal domestically-sourced commodity portfolios for re-emerging MENA agricultural sectors, nested in domestic production and strategic storage. The model is driven by the use of financial-economics concepts to inform a representation of commodity-price volatility.
Keywords: Food price stability, emerging agriculture, optimization models portfolio theory
JEL Classification: C60, L40, Q18
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