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Macroeconomic costs to large scale disruptions of food production: The case of foot- and-mouth disease in the United States
Authors:Richard N. Boisvert  David Kay  Calum G. Turvey
Affiliation:1. Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA;2. Department of Development Sociology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA
Abstract:We forecast the economic consequences of a widespread contamination of the food system based on a hypothetical outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Since the immediate effect on the livestock sector could affect the entire supply chain and US livestock, meat and dairy exports, we measure these impacts using GTAP, a multi-region, multi-sector computable general equilibrium (CGE) model of the global economy. The immediate “shocks” to the US livestock, raw milk and other animal products sectors indirectly affect all sectors of the economy, as well as international markets and trade. We decompose these effects due to each component of the initial shocks, and estimate the importance of these shocks to the national food system for the Mid-Atlantic Region using IMPLAN. Our GTAP results indicate that losses to the USA economy would be about $11.7 billion, and with the ripple effect throughout the rest of the world including beneficiary nations (Argentina, Brazil, Latin America, Australia and New Zealand) and losers (Canada, Mexico, European Union) would be 14.1 billion. We estimate the proportion of the domestic impact affecting the Mid-Atlantic Region. Based on a regional input–output model of that region, we estimate that total losses in value added are nearly $800 million; losses in labor income total about $565 million; and there are job losses of just over 12 thousand.
Keywords:Foot-and-mouth disease  FMD  Agroterrorism  Biosecurity  CGE  GTAP  IMPLAN
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