Trade is critical for many resource-constrained countries, which rely heavily on the import of basic and high-value commodities. Trade also drives inclusive economic growth, enabling producers, including smallholders and family farmers, to access broader markets and improve resilience.
Agricultural trade and markets
Agricultural trade plays a vital role in supporting livelihoods for farmers and workers across the agri-food supply chain, while also helping to reduce global food insecurity. A growing share of agro-food trade involves global value chains (GVCs) that span multiple countries, linking different stages of agricultural and food production and processing.
Key messages
How can government agricultural support policies be designed to enhance the environmental sustainability of production, meet social goals, and ensure global food security? The OECD’s comprehensive research agenda, underpinned by agricultural datasets and consultations with stakeholders, provides insights and evidence to inform the effective design of agricultural policies.
There is growing global demand for agri-food supply chains to be both socially responsible and environmentally sustainable. An evolving framework of trade-related policies, voluntary sustainability standards, and corporate accountability tools are supporting this transformation. The OECD-FAO Guidance for Responsible Agricultural Supply Chains is a cornerstone of these global efforts.
Countries are increasingly adopting digital technologies within their Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) systems to strengthen trade facilitation, support food safety, and promote sustainable agricultural trade. Key technologies include electronic certificates (e-certification), remote audits, conformity assessment platforms, traceability and data-sharing technologies. OECD analysis shows that SPS e-certification improves trade volumes, especially for processed foods, vegetables, and animal products. Moreover, digital trade solutions are expected to play a positive role in improving both the efficiency and environmental sustainability of agricultural trade systems.
Context
More expensive fertiliser leads to more expensive crops
Scenario analysis indicates that a 25% increase in fertiliser prices could lead to a 5% rise in agricultural commodity prices. The impact is greater for fertiliser-intensive crops than for livestock, with the exception of poultry and pig meat, which are reliant on compound feed.
Other input cost fluctuations, i.e. in energy, seeds, labour, or machinery, also influence global food price volatility.
Export Restrictions and Agro-Food Market Stability
An OECD policy paper takes an in-depth look at the use of export restrictions on staple crops between January 2007 and April 2024. The data show that export restrictions increased during the global food price crisis of 2007-08, the COVID-19 pandemic, and following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, with the first period witnessing a significantly higher use of export restrictions than the two subsequent crises.
OECD’s recent update of the database on export restrictions on staple crops (covering export restrictions introduced up to June 2025) shows a sharp decline in export restrictions since mid-2024, as major players lifted quotas, taxes and prohibitions.
Such restrictions may hinder food access for vulnerable populations, disrupt agricultural supply chains, and create uncertainty in agro-food markets.
Uncertainty about the duration and scope of such trade policies may also lead firms and governments to make decisions based on incomplete information, resulting in significant and lasting consequences.
Related data
Related publications
-
Working paper
Private sector perceptions of barriers, opportunities and the future
6 July 202654 Pages -
15 June 202656 Pages
-
3 June 202620 Pages
Latest insights
-
The Environment at a Glance Country Notes present selected environmental indicators, complemented by a small number of socio-economic indicators to support interpretation. They provide a concise, descriptive and internationally comparable overview of country trends and progress across key environmental areas, including climate change, air quality, waste and the circular economy, water management, and biodiversity conservation. The Country Notes are designed to support transparent, evidence-based information. They do not rank countries or prescribe policy responses. This Reader's Guide explains how to navigate the notes, understand the indicators and definitions, and access the underlying data, metadata and methodological information through OECD Data Explorer.Learn more
-
Thomas Gass, currently Ambassador of Switzerland and Head of Mission in Hanoi, Viet Nam, was today appointed as the new Chair of the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee (DAC), the leading international forum for bilateral providers of development aid.Learn more
-
The OECD will present a new Economic Survey of the United Kingdom on Wednesday 15 July 2026. The Survey examines the country’s economic performance in the face of rising global and domestic challenges. A special chapter looks at how the UK can boost regional productivity.Learn more
-
OECD job markets have remained resilient, with total employment in OECD countries at an all-time high and projected to continue to grow this year and next. However, real wages remain below their levels five years ago in around one-third of OECD countries, and this year’s energy shock is expected to put further pressure on wages, according to a new OECD report.Learn more
-
The latest evaluation from the OECD Working Group on Bribery in International Business Transactions (WGB) finds that the Slovak Republic must urgently address serious deficiencies in its framework for fighting foreign bribery, including key elements of its foreign bribery offence. While acknowledging the Slovak Republic’s adoption of a whistleblower protection framework, the WGB is concerned at the recent attempt to dismantle the Whistleblower Protection Office (WPO).Learn more
-
The Phase 4 evaluation on Latvia’s implementation of the Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions acknowledges that the country has made substantial progress, notably by imposing sanctions on two companies for foreign bribery and starting trial proceedings against two other companies.Learn more