Food Supply Management and Tariffication: A Game Theoretic Approach
Abstract
We compare the current Canadian supply management regime in which producers and importers benefit from rent-seeking activities that set production quota and import quota levels with those under a tariff, in which producers partakes in rent-seeking activities in order to induce the government to introduce a favorable tariff regime. We explore two different quota-setting games: (1) the import quota and production quota are set at a level that arises from a Cournot-Nash equilibrium between producers and importers; and (2) the producer marketing board acts as a Stackelberg leader, taking into account the importers’ reaction to its production quota level. We compare these quota-setting games with two different tariff-setting games: (1) A non-cooperative game in which the government sets the tariff at a level that maximizes tariff revenue; and (2) A cooperative game in which producers, through rent-seeking activities, induce the government to set the tariff at a level that maximizes joint government and producer rents.Recommended Citation
Schmitz, Troy G. and Schmitz, Andrew
(2003)
"Food Supply Management and Tariffication: A Game Theoretic Approach,"
Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization:
Vol. 1
:
Iss.
1, Article 4.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/jafio/vol1/iss1/art4
