Price Asymmetry in the International Wheat Market |
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Authors: | Samarendu Mohanty E. Wesley F. Peterson Nancy Cottrell Kruse |
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Affiliation: | Research assistant, Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska.;Associate professor, Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska.;Visiting professor, Department of Economics, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri. |
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Abstract: | ![]() Most wheat exports are accounted for by a limited number of countries with different policy regimes and specializing, for the most part, in particular classes of wheat. Under these circumstances, there is likely to be considerable interaction among the major exporting countries in the determination of wheat prices. In this paper, price linkages between the U.S. and other exporting countries (Canada, the European Union, Argentina and Australia) in the world wheat market are investigated. After determining that the direction of causality is from U. S. prices to the prices of other exporting countries, the nature of the price linkages is studied. The results suggest that the major exporting countries respond asymmetrically to U.S. price changes. The degree of asymmetry differs from one exporting country to another, Argentina and the European Union show greater response to falling prices than to rising prices, while the opposite is true for Canada and Australia. |
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