Agricultural Market Integration Analysis
Agricultural market integration analysis asks whether prices for the same commodity in geographically separated markets move together — and how quickly and symmetrically a price change in one market is transmitted to another. Martin Ravallion's 1986 article 'Testing Market Integration', using Bangladesh rice prices, set the template: spatial price relationships are dynamic, so integration must be tested in a model that distinguishes short-run from long-run co-movement. The modern toolkit formalises this with cointegration and error-correction methods — long-run integration means prices share a common stochastic trend, while the error-correction term measures how fast deviations from the long-run relationship are arbitraged away. Barrett and Li later sharpened the conceptual distinction between mere price equilibrium and genuine tradability-based integration.
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Sources
- Ravallion, M. (1986). Testing Market Integration. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 68(1), 102-109. DOI: 10.2307/1241654 ↗
- Barrett, C. B., & Li, J. R. (2002). Distinguishing Between Equilibrium and Integration in Spatial Price Analysis. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 84(2), 292-307. DOI: 10.1111/1467-8276.00298 ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Agricultural Market Integration Analysis (Spatial Price Cointegration and Transmission). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/food-agriculture-studies/market-integration-cointegration-analysis
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