It has often been suggested that more stable wool prices would lead to an outward shift in the long-run demand for wool. To assess this claim it is necessary to examine different sources of risk and instability in wool prices and their impact on the risk borne by wool users. A model is presented in which the input and output decisions of a wool processor are related to interactions between the wool and yarn markets. It is concluded that, if fluctuations in final demand or exchange rates are the major sources of instability, the long-run effect of stabilising prices is to increase the risk faced by wool users and reduce that faced by wool growers
The object of this study is an econometric evaluation of the factors determining the price of raw wo...
The process by which producers form expectations has implications for model building and policy anal...
We estimate a hedonic pricing model to quantify the relationship between clean price of lots of wool...
It has often been suggested that more stable wool prices would lead to an outward shift in the long-...
In much of the stabilization literature emphasis has been placed on the impact of stabilization sche...
This paper presents a new framework for evaluating the producer benefits from price stabilisation sc...
In a recent article in this journal, Tisdell (1) has taken up the question of price stabilisation as...
Production instability has been rightly regarded as one of the key problems of Australian agricultur...
In this paper, some aspects of the application of optimal-control techniques to wool industry price ...
A simple utility-based model of risky wool production is presented. Evaluation of the model indicate...
Stabilization of wool prices (which is partially achieved by the Wool Commission) may reduce the ave...
Based on cointegration analysis and monthly data from 1976.8 to 1999.10, a long-run equilibrium rela...
The key blending parameters can currently define fifteen main wool product-process groups for New Ze...
The objective of this study was to determine whether long-run relationships existed between price pr...
A preliminary analysis of demand in eight major OECD wool-consuming countries is used to provide up-...
The object of this study is an econometric evaluation of the factors determining the price of raw wo...
The process by which producers form expectations has implications for model building and policy anal...
We estimate a hedonic pricing model to quantify the relationship between clean price of lots of wool...
It has often been suggested that more stable wool prices would lead to an outward shift in the long-...
In much of the stabilization literature emphasis has been placed on the impact of stabilization sche...
This paper presents a new framework for evaluating the producer benefits from price stabilisation sc...
In a recent article in this journal, Tisdell (1) has taken up the question of price stabilisation as...
Production instability has been rightly regarded as one of the key problems of Australian agricultur...
In this paper, some aspects of the application of optimal-control techniques to wool industry price ...
A simple utility-based model of risky wool production is presented. Evaluation of the model indicate...
Stabilization of wool prices (which is partially achieved by the Wool Commission) may reduce the ave...
Based on cointegration analysis and monthly data from 1976.8 to 1999.10, a long-run equilibrium rela...
The key blending parameters can currently define fifteen main wool product-process groups for New Ze...
The objective of this study was to determine whether long-run relationships existed between price pr...
A preliminary analysis of demand in eight major OECD wool-consuming countries is used to provide up-...
The object of this study is an econometric evaluation of the factors determining the price of raw wo...
The process by which producers form expectations has implications for model building and policy anal...
We estimate a hedonic pricing model to quantify the relationship between clean price of lots of wool...