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Economic Aspects of International Agricultural Trade and Possible Threats to Food Security in the EU-27: A Systematic Statistical Approach

In: Shifting Patterns of Agricultural Trade

Author

Listed:
  • Jean Vasile Andrei

    (Petroleum-Gas University of Ploiesti
    National Institute for Economic Research ‘Costin C. Kiritescu’, Romanian Academy)

  • Luminiţa Chivu

    (National Institute for Economic Research ‘Costin C. Kiritescu’, Romanian Academy)

  • Marius Constantin

    (Bucharest University of Economic Studies)

  • Jonel Subić

    (Institute of Agricultural Economics)

Abstract

Food trade system and global agri-food chains have become vitally important for feeding the world’s population and ensuring food security. Agricultural trade has been growing in both volume and value with every year. The emergent question in this context is whether the dependency on food imports along with the occurrence of trade deficits threaten food security. In this chapter, the authors analyze the dynamics of agricultural trade balance in the case of EU-27 countries based on the 2015–2019 timeframe. The study is focused on the economic aspects of agricultural trade, food security threats, exploitation of natural resources, and the dynamics of international marketing. Additionally, the chapter emphasizes the structure of agricultural trade balance along 24 categories of agricultural products as defined in the United Nations Comtrade Database. Food trade issues are approached per country by studying trade balances for particular categories of agricultural products and the aggregated trade balance deficit of a country. It is revealed that the EU-27s overall agricultural trade balance is permanently positive (the highest surplus observed in 2019), even though there exists chronic dependency on the import of fish, crustaceans, mollusks, edible fruits, oil seeds and oleaginous fruits, industrial or medicinal plants, as well as coffee, tea, mate, and spices. The authors conclude that Germany is facing the highest deficit in agricultural trade followed by Sweden and Portugal. The Netherlands, Spain, and France, on the contrary, experience a permanent surplus in agricultural trade.

Suggested Citation

  • Jean Vasile Andrei & Luminiţa Chivu & Marius Constantin & Jonel Subić, 2021. "Economic Aspects of International Agricultural Trade and Possible Threats to Food Security in the EU-27: A Systematic Statistical Approach," Springer Books, in: Vasilii Erokhin & Gao Tianming & Jean Vasile Andrei (ed.), Shifting Patterns of Agricultural Trade, chapter 0, pages 229-261, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-981-16-3260-0_10
    DOI: 10.1007/978-981-16-3260-0_10
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    Cited by:

    1. Radu Petrariu & Marius Constantin & Mihai Dinu & Simona Roxana Pătărlăgeanu & Mădălina Elena Deaconu, 2021. "Water, Energy, Food, Waste Nexus: Between Synergy and Trade-Offs in Romania Based on Entrepreneurship and Economic Performance," Energies, MDPI, vol. 14(16), pages 1-23, August.

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