Demand for coffee in Sweden: The role of prices, preferences and market power
Abstract
There is a widespread belief that consumer coffee prices are high relative to bean prices and that lower consumer prices would lead to substantial increases in bean exports from Third-World countries. This issue is evaluated by analysing how retail prices, preferences and market power influence coffee demand in Sweden. A demand function is estimated for the period 1968-2002 and used, together with information on import prices of coffee beans, to simulate an oligopoly model. This approach gives estimates of the maximum average degree of market power and shows how coffee demand would react to reductions in marginal cost to its minimum level. The maximum level of market power is found to be low, but it generates large spreads between consumer and bean prices because the price elasticity has low absolute values. Moreover, the impact of a price decrease would be small because long-run coffee demand is dominated by changes in the population structure in combination with different preferences across age groups. Hence, a change to perfect competition would only have a negligible effect on bean imports.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Publisher
Elsevier
Electronic version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2006.11.005
Journal title
Food Policy
Volume
32
Issue
5-6
Start page
566
End page
584
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007Author
Durevall, Dick
Keywords
Coffee exports
Coffee price
Market power
Multinationals
Sweden
Commodity markets
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
Language
eng