Submitted:
07 May 2025
Posted:
08 May 2025
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Abstract

Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Microeconomic Price Theory and Market Structures
2.2. Domestic Demand as a Long-Run Price Driver
2.3. Behavioral Responses and Selective Exposure
2.4. Institutional and Transaction Cost Barriers
- High transaction costs, due to geographic dispersion, poor roads, or weak coordination, limit producers’ access to higher-paying domestic buyers.
- Absence of forward contracts or cooperatives reduces producers’ ability to lock in prices based on expected demand.
- Weak bargaining power and lack of quality standards further constrain their ability to benefit from local processing industries.
3. Methodology
3.1. Research Design and Approach
3.2. Data Sources and Variable Construction
- Domestic Consumption of Natural Rubber (X) – Measured in metric tons, sourced from national industry reports, CCC (Confederación Cauchera de Colombia), and official statistics.
- World Price of Natural Rubber (W) – Measured in USD/kg, obtained from the World Bank Commodity Price Database.
- Exchange Rate (E) – Expressed as the annual average COP/USD exchange rate, sourced from Banco de la República de Colombia.
3.3. Model Specification
- Δ is the first difference operator,
- ln denotes the natural logarithm,
- εt is the error term,
- λ1,λ2,λ3,λ4 capture long-run relationships,
- The summation terms represent short-run effects.
3.4. Estimation Procedure
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Stationarity TestsAugmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) and Phillips-Perron (PP) tests are applied to confirm that none of the variables are integrated of order two (I(2)), as ARDL models are invalid in such cases.
- 2.
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Lag SelectionThe optimal lag structure for each variable is determined using the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), ensuring model parsimony while minimizing information loss.
- 3.
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Bounds Testing for CointegrationTo test for the existence of a long-run equilibrium relationship between the variables, the ARDL bounds testing approach is used. Critical values are taken from Narayan (2005), which adjusts for small sample sizes.
- 4.
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Estimation of Long-Run and Short-Run ModelsUpon confirming cointegration, long-run coefficients are estimated from the levels portion of the ARDL model. The short-run dynamics are captured using an Error Correction Model (ECM), where the coefficient of the error correction term (ECT) indicates the speed of adjustment to equilibrium.
- 5.
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Diagnostic TestingPost-estimation diagnostics are conducted to verify the robustness of the model, including tests for:
- ○
- Autocorrelation (Breusch-Godfrey LM Test),
- ○
- Heteroskedasticity (White Test),
- ○
- Normality (Jarque-Bera),
- ○
- Stability (CUSUM and CUSUMSQ).
3.5. Software
4. Results
4.1. Descriptive Statistics and Variable Trends
- The farmgate price of natural rubber (in real COP/kg) exhibits substantial volatility, influenced by global commodity cycles, exchange rate variations, and inconsistent domestic market demand.
- Domestic consumption follows a slow upward trend, reflecting increased national interest in replacing imported rubber products and developing local rubber-based industries.
- The world price shows pronounced global cycles, particularly spikes around 2008 and post-2020 pandemic supply disruptions.
- The exchange rate fluctuates with broader macroeconomic conditions and has a clear depreciating trend, impacting input costs and local pricing behavior.
4.2. Unit Root and Stationarity Tests
- lnY (farmgate price) and lnW\ln WlnW (world price) are integrated of order one, I(1).
- lnX (domestic consumption) and lnE (exchange rate) are stationary at levels, I(0).
4.3. ARDL Bounds Test for Cointegration
4.4. Long-Run Coefficient Estimates
| Variable | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-Statistic | Significance |
| ln(Domestic Consumption) (X) | 0.49 | 0.17 | 2.88 | p < 0.01 |
| ln(World Price) (W) | 0.21 | 0.13 | 1.62 | Not significant |
| ln(Exchange Rate) (E) | -0.35 | 0.11 | -3.18 | p < 0.01 |
4.5. Short-Run Dynamics and Error Correction
| Variable | Coefficient | Std. Error | t-Statistic | Significance |
| Δ ln(Domestic Consumption) | 0.07 | 0.06 | 1.12 | Not significant |
| Δ ln(World Price) | 0.04 | 0.05 | 0.80 | Not significant |
| Δ ln(Exchange Rate) | -0.10 | 0.05 | -2.00 | p < 0.05 |
| Δ ln(Farmgate Price)ₜ₋₁ | 0.43 | 0.14 | 3.07 | p < 0.01 |
| Error Correction Term (ECTₜ₋₁) | -0.51 | 0.12 | -4.25 | p < 0.01 |
- Short-run effects of domestic consumption on price are statistically insignificant, suggesting institutional frictions delay transmission.
- The exchange rate retains a significant short-run effect, indicating immediate input cost pass-through.
- The error correction term (ECT) is negative and significant, confirming convergence to equilibrium. The magnitude (-0.51) indicates that deviations from long-run equilibrium are corrected at a speed of 51% per year.
4.6. Diagnostic Checks
- No autocorrelation: Breusch-Godfrey LM test p > 0.1
- Homoscedasticity: White test p > 0.1
- Normality: Jarque-Bera test p > 0.05
- Model stability: CUSUM and CUSUMSQ within critical bounds
5. Discussion
5.1. Long-Run Elasticity and Demand-Led Price Formation
5.2. Time Lags, Behavioral Frictions, and Selective Exposure
5.3. Institutional Barriers and Transaction Costs
- Fragmented production with little aggregation capacity.
- Scarcity of local processors and absence of guaranteed minimum prices.
- Lack of quality grading systems that would allow producers to benefit from product differentiation.
5.4. Toward a Domestic Market Strategy
6. Conclusion and Policy Recommendations
6.1. Conclusion
6.2. Policy Recommendations
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Strengthen Domestic Processing and Procurement Channels
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- Encourage investment in local processing facilities through public-private partnerships.
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- Prioritize domestic rubber products in state procurement policies (e.g., defense, infrastructure, sanitation).
- 2.
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Develop Inclusive Market Infrastructure
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- Invest in collection centers and cooperatives to reduce transportation and coordination costs.
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- Support logistics and cold-chain improvements for quality preservation and product aggregation.
- 3.
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Enhance Market Information Systems
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- Create real-time, decentralized information platforms (SMS, radio) tailored to rural literacy and connectivity.
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- Promote transparency in farmgate pricing and buyer behavior.
- 4.
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Institutionalize Price Stabilization Mechanisms
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- Introduce conditional minimum price schemes or price bands indexed to local production costs.
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- Support insurance products or income support mechanisms tied to market shocks.
- 5.
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Build Farmer Capacity for Market Participation
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- Offer training on price trends, contract negotiation, and product quality standards.
- ○
- Incentivize producer association formation to improve bargaining power and economies of scale.
References
- Acharya, R. N., Koirala, K. H., & Mishra, A. K. (2018). Market participation and farmgate prices: Evidence from organic and conventional vegetable farms. Food Policy, 79, 1–10.
- AGROSAVIA. (2018). Modelo productivo para el cultivo de caucho en Colombia, con énfasis en la Orinoquia y el Magdalena Medio. Mosquera: Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria. [CrossRef]
- Cenicaucho. (2021). Boletín técnico y comercial del caucho natural colombiano. Confederación Cauchera de Colombia (CCC).
- Meyer, J., & von Cramon-Taubadel, S. (2004). Asymmetric price transmission: A survey. Journal of Agricultural Economics, 55(3), 581–611. [CrossRef]
- Narayan, P. K. (2005). The saving and investment nexus for China: Evidence from cointegration tests. Applied Economics, 37(17), 1979–1990. [CrossRef]
- North, D. C. (1990). Institutions, institutional change and economic performance. Cambridge University Press.
- Pesaran, M. H., Shin, Y., & Smith, R. J. (2001). Bounds testing approaches to the analysis of level relationships. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 16(3), 289–326. [CrossRef]
- Williamson, O. E. (1985). The economic institutions of capitalism. Free Press.
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