Commodity Booms and Busts

Annual Review of Resource Economics

Vol. 3:87-118 (Volume publication date October 2011)
First published online as a Review in Advance on June 13, 2011
https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.resource.012809.104220

Abstract

Periodically, the global economy experiences great commodity booms and busts, characterized by a broad and sharp comovement of commodity prices. There have been two such episodes since the Korean War. The first event peaked in 1974 and the second in 2008, 34 years apart. Both created major economic and political shocks, including fallen governments and human suffering due to high food prices. Each occurrence raised serious concerns over food and energy security and led to more government intervention in the commodity markets. Although there is no simple explanation for what causes such complex events, they do share similar characteristics. We find at the core of these cycles a set of contemporaneous supply and demand surprises that coincided with low inventories and that were magnified by macroeconomic shocks and policy responses. In the next few decades, the world faces the prospect of continued increases in the demand for commodities and greater uncertainty about supply. However, because market participants are likely to respond by increasing inventory holdings and investing in new technologies, we see no reason to expect an increase in the frequency of dramatic commodity booms and busts.

Keywords

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Figure 1  Two booms and busts. Commodity prices were obtained from the International Monetary Fund and were deflated by the U.S. consumer price index, excluding food and energy. The metals index represents industrial metals like copper, lead, tin, nickel, and aluminum. Data from the International Monetary Fund and the Commodity Research Bureau.

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Figure 5  Real prices and ending stocks to use (1960–2010). Prices were measured in March for corn, cotton, and wheat and in April for rice. We use U.S. prices for corn, cotton, wheat, copper, and crude oil. We use Thai prices for rice. For each series, we plot the log of the price minus the log of the all-items consumer price index. The two boom-and-bust periods are highlighted in green for 1971–1976 and in blue for 2004–2010. All stocks-to-use ratios are detrended by a linear trend. We exclude China from rice stocks to use. Data from the Commodity Research Bureau, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and International Monetary Fund.

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