Matthias Kalkuhl
University of Potsdam
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Publication
Featured researches published by Matthias Kalkuhl.
Environmental Research Letters | 2016
Christopher Bren d’Amour; Leonie Wenz; Matthias Kalkuhl; Jan Christoph Steckel; Felix Creutzig
The 2008–2010 food crisis might have been a harbinger of fundamental climate-induced food crises with geopolitical implications. Heat-wave-induced yield losses in Russia and resulting export restrictions led to increases in market prices for wheat across the Middle East, likely contributing to the Arab Spring. With ongoing climate change, temperatures and temperature variability will rise, leading to higher uncertainty in yields for major nutritional crops. Here we investigate which countries are most vulnerable to teleconnected supply-shocks, i.e. where diets strongly rely on the import of wheat, maize, or rice, and where a large share of the population is living in poverty. We find that the Middle East is most sensitive to teleconnected supply shocks in wheat, Central America to supply shocks in maize, and Western Africa to supply shocks in rice. Weighing with poverty levels, Sub-Saharan Africa is most affected. Altogether, a simultaneous 10% reduction in exports of wheat, rice, and maize would reduce caloric intake of 55 million people living in poverty by about 5%. Export bans in major producing regions would put up to 200 million people below the poverty line at risk, 90% of which live in Sub-Saharan Africa. Our results suggest that a region-specific combination of national increases in agricultural productivity and diversification of trade partners and diets can effectively decrease future food security risks.
Food Policy | 2017
Bernardina Algieri; Matthias Kalkuhl; Nicolas Koch
The substantial booms and busts in agricultural prices marked by extreme events across commodities lead to heated debates about the effects of speculative trading on commodity price fluctuations. This study proposes a new approach to understanding extreme events and boom–bust processes in agricultural markets. Using weekly futures data for twelve indexed agricultural commodities during 2006 to 2016, we find that extreme price changes, located in the 10% tails of the distribution, cluster across agricultural markets. We then implement a multinomial logit model to investigate which factors are associated with the propagation of extreme events. Specifically, we disentangle three transmission conduits. (1) The macroeconomic conduit captures the possibility that the synchronized extreme price events are generated by business-cycle driven demand shifts mainly in emerging economies. (2) The financial conduit refers to potential links between extreme returns and the increasing flow of money from financial participants into agricultural futures markets. (3) Finally, the energy conduit accounts for possible spillover effects due to oil price shocks. Our results indicate an important role of managed money positions and oil prices while the real demand channel remains mostly insignificant.
2013 Annual Meeting, August 4-6, 2013, Washington, D.C. | 2013
Mekbib G. Haile; Matthias Kalkuhl
International Tax and Public Finance | 2017
Matthias Kalkuhl; Ottmar Edenhofer
53rd Annual Conference, Berlin, Germany, September 25-27, 2013 | 2013
Mekbib G. Haile; Matthias Kalkuhl
2014 International Congress, August 26-29, 2014, Ljubljana, Slovenia | 2014
Mekbib G. Haile; Matthias Kalkuhl; Joachim von Braun
2013 Annual Meeting, August 4-6, 2013, Washington, D.C. | 2013
Mekbib G. Haile; Matthias Kalkuhl; Joachim von Braun
Land Use Policy | 2018
Matthias Kalkuhl; Blanca Fernandez Milan; Gregor Schwerhoff; Michael Jakob; Maren Hahnen; Felix Creutzig
MPRA Paper | 2017
Matthias Kalkuhl; Blanca Fernandez Milan; Gregor Schwerhoff; Michael Jakob; Maren Hahnen; Felix Creutzig
Agricultural Economics | 2017
Mekbib G. Haile; Matthias Kalkuhl; Bernardina Algieri; Samuel Gebreselassie