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Abstract
This study examines whether the local competition for corn to produce ethanol has lead to
significantly higher prices for farmers located close to ethanol biorefineries. If any, such
price premiums for spatial closeness would be in addition to the general level of corn price
changes experienced by farmers throughout the U.S. The difference-in-differences
estimation method is used to account for both time and spatial differences in order to
measure the interaction of time and spatial effects. Using the USDA’s ARMS data, the
results show that while prices in real terms have changed over time, farmers located close to
ethanol biorefineries have not received significantly higher prices than farmers living farther
away from biorefineries. These findings indicate that there is a lack of evidence for price
premiums due to spatial closeness to ethanol plants.