Risk, Arbitrage, and Spatial Price Relationships: Insights from China’s Hog Market under the African Swine Fever
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Series
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SpeakerH. Holly Wang (Purdue University)
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FieldSpatial Economics
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LocationOnline
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Date and time
November 18, 2021
14:00 - 15:00
Co-authors: Michael S. Delgado and Meilin Ma
Abstract: We use a temporary ban on inter-province shipping of live hogs inducedby the 2018 outbreak of African Swine Fever (ASF) in China as a natural
experiment to study spatial mechanisms behind the dynamics of market
integration. With a unique dataset of weekly provincial hog prices, we employ a
novel spatial network model to estimate the strength of price co-movement
across provinces pre and post the ban. Results indicate that, in the highly
integrated national market prior to the ban, longer geographical distances
between two provinces did not weaken the strength of their price linkage. The
ban broken down spatial integration. Longer distances became a significant
obstacle to spatial price linkage in the post-ban periods, implying faster
re-integration of hog prices between proximate provinces than remote ones. The
negative effect of distance can be rationalized by the interplay between
arbitrage opportunities and imperfect information. Our findings highlight information
transparency as a key to market integration post shipping bans used to curb
animal pandemics like ASF.
If you are interested in joining the seminar, please send an email to Hedda Werkman.