BREAD SUBSIDIES IN EGYPT دعم الخبز في مصر | ||||
Journal of Agricultural Economics and Social Sciences | ||||
Article 11, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 2012, Page 677-705 PDF (411.87 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/jaess.2012.45077 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Author | ||||
أحمد سلامه | ||||
کلية العلوم الادارية و الاقتصاد و العلوم السياسية – الجامعة البريطانية | ||||
Abstract | ||||
The topic of Baladi bread subsidies is of great interest to the poor Egyptian people. About 80% of Egyptian people consume baladi bread. Subsidies protect the welfare of the poor and the economically disadvantaged. Food subsidy programs are facing more criticism in developing countries because of their large contribution to government budget deficits. The cost of food subsidies reached about 1.8 % of the GDP in Egypt in 2008. Leakages in bread subsidy system are substantial. Baladi bread leakages at the national level were about 41 percent of the total supply in 2004/05. The higher the leakage is, the higher the cost of delivering subsides. There is a complete lack of targeting in the system. The system allows all customers to enjoy the benefits and there is minimal supervision to ensure that the bread reaches the poor. This research focuses on targeting subsidy of the Baladi bread to the intended customers and explores the policy options in this regard. It derives the income elasticity of Baladi bread for three income groups: high income, medium income, and low income. The study clearly illustrates that Baladi bread is an inferior good for high-income families. The research also derives the demand function for the group of bread and cereals based on 2008/09 CAPMAS survey. The study reveals that poverty has almost no weight in deciding on the allocation of bread subsidies to different governorates. Field studies suggest that poor people prefer in- kind subsidies to cash subsidies because they do not trust the government. | ||||
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