Mecardo Analysis - Wool Economics 101
- By: "Farm Tender" News
- Ag Tech News
- Aug 02, 2018
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Market forces will act to push the price to an equilibrium level where the quantity demanded is equal to the quantity supplied. This is where the demand and supply curves intersect at a price level of 400 and a quantity of 22 units – point E1 on Figure 1.
In the case of the wool market, there has been a steady decline in wool supply since the collapse of the Reserve Price Scheme in the early 1990’s and the gradual switch from wool production to cropping. As such, for every price level, the quantity of wool supplied is now lower. This can be represented on the demand and supply diagram as a shift in supply to the left, with the supply curve moving from S1 to S2 (Figure 2). The new equilibrium level (E2) under this scenario of reduced supply is shown as a price of 600 and a quantity of 20 units. In this circumstance, the price has been driven higher by a contraction in supply over time.
Analysis of the wool market supply (bales produced per year) and price (Eastern Market Indicator – EMI) since the early 1990’s confirms the theory that reduced supply has been a key driver of higher wool prices. As identified in Figure 3, annual total wool bale production has declined from over 4.5 million bales in 1992 to under 2 million bales in 2016, with the EMI more than doubling over that time frame from 600¢/kg clean to over 1200¢/kg.
Key points
* Supply of wool has been in decline since the early 1990s and is a key underlying reason as to why wool prices have been increasing over time.
* The annual level of wool bales produced has more than halved over the last two decades which has coincided with wool prices more than doubling in value.
* In recent years the wool supply has stabilised, yet prices have continued to climb suggesting demand led factors are behind the current market rally.
What does this mean?
There may also be demand led factors that have seen the wool price find additional support. Certainly, in recent times the work undertaken by Australian Wool Innovation (AWI) to promote the sustainable credentials of wool and the moisture/temperature control benefits of a natural fibre like wool has encouraged the popularity of the product.
Similarly, the growth in Chinese wealth and population has seen a lift in demand for wool and provided an additional boost to wool prices. However, it is hard to deny that tighter supply is a crucial factor in the price surge. The challenge for the Australian wool industry going forward is to encourage producers back into the market to ensure supply can continue to match future demand growth
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