Government Getting It Wrong On Addressing Poultry Issues

In the past weeks, the Malaysian government issued three measures affecting the poultry industry, in order to try to contain inflation and ensure supply.
They are:

  • Price ceilings;
  • Removal of Approved Permits (APs);
  • Export ban.
    According to the Center for Market Education (CME), only the second one (APs removal) can be considered beneficial in the fight against price tensions and to improve food security. Price ceilings and export ban, instead, are the perfect recipe for prolonging inflation and ensuring food insecurity.
  • “First and foremost – explained Dr Carmelo Ferlito, it is necessary to recognise that, in pushing for these measures, the government fails to recognize who is behind the current issues with poultry prices and supply: the government itself. In fact, supply chain disruptions were caused by lockdowns; those supply chain disruptions created price tensions, while general inflationary pressures have been generated by excessive money creation: both lockdowns and money creation were decided by the government”.
  • “It is difficult to trust government planned initiatives to fight problems that policies implemented by the same people generated”, continued Dr. Ferlito. Why are price ceilings and export bans not helpful?
  1. Lockdowns created a shock both on the supply and the demand sides. With the reopening of the economy and the bettering of the economic conditions, demand started to scale up. In this scenario, it is easier for demand than for supply to adapt to the new conditions. In fact, during the Great Lockdown, production plants were switched off, machinery dismantled, and workers laid off; such a process of capital destruction was faster than any process of capital creation can be – and capital creation requires positive profit expectations.
  2. Price tensions created by increasing demand met by insufficient supply are necessary to signal to the supply side that this is the moment to scale up.
  3. If the market is allowed to work, price tensions will be resolved quicker, as the supply can recognize and exploit profit opportunities. With the scaling up of supply, prices can finally cool down. With price ceilings, it happens exactly the opposite: profit expectations are frustrated, and suppliers would avoid investing in the necessary process of capital creation and subsequent production.
  4. With profit expectations domestically frustrated by price ceilings, poultry producers can look at foreign markets to keep on their production in a profitable way. But then the government decides to ban export, further stopping the supply process of scaling up. The negative consequences generated by price ceilings and export bans can summarised below:
  • Price tensions are not solved and, when the ceilings are removed, consumers will meet again high prices.
  • The necessary process of increasing supply is blocked because profit expectations are frustrated. Consumers will not get more chicken on the market, but less, as some producers may abandon the market: this means even higher prices. Some of the producers may decide to abandon domestic production, generating unemployment.
  • “The road to hell is paved with good intentions”, reminded Dr Ferlito
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