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Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries

The stability of food supply chains is crucial to the food security of people around the world. Since the beginning of 2020, this stability has been undergoing one of the most vigorous pressure tests ever due to the COVID-19 outbreak. From a mere health issue, the pandemic has turned into an economi...

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Autores principales: Erokhin, Vasilii, Gao, Tianming
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7459461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32785155
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165775
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author Erokhin, Vasilii
Gao, Tianming
author_facet Erokhin, Vasilii
Gao, Tianming
author_sort Erokhin, Vasilii
collection PubMed
description The stability of food supply chains is crucial to the food security of people around the world. Since the beginning of 2020, this stability has been undergoing one of the most vigorous pressure tests ever due to the COVID-19 outbreak. From a mere health issue, the pandemic has turned into an economic threat to food security globally in the forms of lockdowns, economic decline, food trade restrictions, and rising food inflation. It is safe to assume that the novel health crisis has badly struck the least developed and developing economies, where people are particularly vulnerable to hunger and malnutrition. However, due to the recency of the COVID-19 problem, the impacts of macroeconomic fluctuations on food insecurity have remained scantily explored. In this study, the authors attempted to bridge this gap by revealing interactions between the food security status of people and the dynamics of COVID-19 cases, food trade, food inflation, and currency volatilities. The study was performed in the cases of 45 developing economies distributed to three groups by the level of income. The consecutive application of the autoregressive distributed lag method, Yamamoto’s causality test, and variance decomposition analysis allowed the authors to find the food insecurity effects of COVID-19 to be more perceptible in upper-middle-income economies than in the least developed countries. In the latter, food security risks attributed to the emergence of the health crisis were mainly related to economic access to adequate food supply (food inflation), whereas in higher-income developing economies, availability-sided food security risks (food trade restrictions and currency depreciation) were more prevalent. The approach presented in this paper contributes to the establishment of a methodology framework that may equip decision-makers with up-to-date estimations of health crisis effects on economic parameters of food availability and access to staples in food-insecure communities.
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spelling pubmed-74594612020-09-02 Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries Erokhin, Vasilii Gao, Tianming Int J Environ Res Public Health Article The stability of food supply chains is crucial to the food security of people around the world. Since the beginning of 2020, this stability has been undergoing one of the most vigorous pressure tests ever due to the COVID-19 outbreak. From a mere health issue, the pandemic has turned into an economic threat to food security globally in the forms of lockdowns, economic decline, food trade restrictions, and rising food inflation. It is safe to assume that the novel health crisis has badly struck the least developed and developing economies, where people are particularly vulnerable to hunger and malnutrition. However, due to the recency of the COVID-19 problem, the impacts of macroeconomic fluctuations on food insecurity have remained scantily explored. In this study, the authors attempted to bridge this gap by revealing interactions between the food security status of people and the dynamics of COVID-19 cases, food trade, food inflation, and currency volatilities. The study was performed in the cases of 45 developing economies distributed to three groups by the level of income. The consecutive application of the autoregressive distributed lag method, Yamamoto’s causality test, and variance decomposition analysis allowed the authors to find the food insecurity effects of COVID-19 to be more perceptible in upper-middle-income economies than in the least developed countries. In the latter, food security risks attributed to the emergence of the health crisis were mainly related to economic access to adequate food supply (food inflation), whereas in higher-income developing economies, availability-sided food security risks (food trade restrictions and currency depreciation) were more prevalent. The approach presented in this paper contributes to the establishment of a methodology framework that may equip decision-makers with up-to-date estimations of health crisis effects on economic parameters of food availability and access to staples in food-insecure communities. MDPI 2020-08-10 2020-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7459461/ /pubmed/32785155 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165775 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Erokhin, Vasilii
Gao, Tianming
Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries
title Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries
title_full Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries
title_fullStr Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries
title_short Impacts of COVID-19 on Trade and Economic Aspects of Food Security: Evidence from 45 Developing Countries
title_sort impacts of covid-19 on trade and economic aspects of food security: evidence from 45 developing countries
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7459461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32785155
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165775
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