Datum
2022-12-30Schlagwort
330 Wirtschaft 630 Landwirtschaft, Veterinärmedizin IndonesienStadtPreiselastizitätEinkommenFuttermittelNachfrageWohlbefindenMetadata
Zur Langanzeige
Aufsatz
Income and price elasticities of animal food demand and welfare in Indonesian urban: an application of the LA-AIDS
Zusammenfassung
Protein consumption can be a measure of the welfare of society. Developed countries consume more protein than developing countries. This study analyzes the effect of rising prices and income on demand and welfare in urban Indonesia. The research data use the 2018 Household National Socio-Economic Survey (Susenas) data in household consumption and expenditure data collected by the Central Statistics Agency (BPS). The number of samples is 133,873 households. The demand systems approach uses the Almost Ideal Demand System (LA-AIDS). The welfare change approach uses Compensating Variation (CV) and Equivalent Variation (EV). The results showed that the meat group was the most elastic animal food with a demand elasticity of 13,936%, followed by milk (0.991%), sea fish (0.649%), eggs (0.284%), and chicken meat (0.057%). Beef is a substitute for sea fish and eggs. Beef with chicken and milk is complementary. All animal food is a luxury item except sea fish, which is a normal item. In the long term, the highest marginal expenditure share is marine fish at 0.592%, followed by milk (0.123%), beef (0.102%), eggs (0.078%), and the lowest is chicken meat at 0.012%. Taking into account the substitution, the price increase simultaneously requires CV compensation of Rp. 244,830/HH/month, EV of Rp.231,858/HH/month. Especially for the animal food group, the biggest compensation for eggs needs CV compensation of Rp. 10,083/HH/month, and EV of Rp. 9,493/HH/month. In general, EV compensation is more effective than CV compensation.
Zitierform
In: Future of Food: Journal on Food, Agriculture & Society Vol. 11 / No. 1 (2022-12-30) eissn:2197-411XSammlung(en)
Vol 11, No 1 (2023) (Future of Food: Journal on Food, Agriculture & Society // The Future of Food Journal: Journal on Food, Agriculture & Society)Zitieren
@article{doi:10.17170/kobra-202210056939,
author={Anindita, Ratya and Sa`diyah, Ana Arifatus and Khoiriyah, Nikmatul},
title={Income and price elasticities of animal food demand and welfare in Indonesian urban: an application of the LA-AIDS},
journal={Future of Food: Journal on Food, Agriculture & Society},
year={2022}
}
0500 Oax 0501 Text $btxt$2rdacontent 0502 Computermedien $bc$2rdacarrier 1100 2022$n2022 1500 1/eng 2050 ##0##http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/14531 3000 Anindita, Ratya 3010 Sa`diyah, Ana Arifatus 3010 Khoiriyah, Nikmatul 4000 Income and price elasticities of animal food demand and welfare in Indonesian urban: an application of the LA-AIDS / Anindita, Ratya 4030 4060 Online-Ressource 4085 ##0##=u http://nbn-resolving.de/http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/14531=x R 4204 \$dAufsatz 4170 5550 {{Indonesien}} 5550 {{Stadt}} 5550 {{Preiselastizität}} 5550 {{Einkommen}} 5550 {{Futtermittel}} 5550 {{Nachfrage}} 5550 {{Wohlbefinden}} 7136 ##0##http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/14531
2023-03-24T16:41:17Z 2023-03-24T16:41:17Z 2022-12-30 doi:10.17170/kobra-202210056939 http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/14531 eng Namensnennung 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ demand system price change welfare CV EV 330 630 Income and price elasticities of animal food demand and welfare in Indonesian urban: an application of the LA-AIDS Aufsatz Protein consumption can be a measure of the welfare of society. Developed countries consume more protein than developing countries. This study analyzes the effect of rising prices and income on demand and welfare in urban Indonesia. The research data use the 2018 Household National Socio-Economic Survey (Susenas) data in household consumption and expenditure data collected by the Central Statistics Agency (BPS). The number of samples is 133,873 households. The demand systems approach uses the Almost Ideal Demand System (LA-AIDS). The welfare change approach uses Compensating Variation (CV) and Equivalent Variation (EV). The results showed that the meat group was the most elastic animal food with a demand elasticity of 13,936%, followed by milk (0.991%), sea fish (0.649%), eggs (0.284%), and chicken meat (0.057%). Beef is a substitute for sea fish and eggs. Beef with chicken and milk is complementary. All animal food is a luxury item except sea fish, which is a normal item. In the long term, the highest marginal expenditure share is marine fish at 0.592%, followed by milk (0.123%), beef (0.102%), eggs (0.078%), and the lowest is chicken meat at 0.012%. Taking into account the substitution, the price increase simultaneously requires CV compensation of Rp. 244,830/HH/month, EV of Rp.231,858/HH/month. Especially for the animal food group, the biggest compensation for eggs needs CV compensation of Rp. 10,083/HH/month, and EV of Rp. 9,493/HH/month. In general, EV compensation is more effective than CV compensation. open access Anindita, Ratya Sa`diyah, Ana Arifatus Khoiriyah, Nikmatul Indonesien Stadt Preiselastizität Einkommen Futtermittel Nachfrage Wohlbefinden publishedVersion eissn:2197-411X No. 1 Future of Food: Journal on Food, Agriculture & Society Vol. 11 false 491
Die folgenden Lizenzbestimmungen sind mit dieser Ressource verbunden: