Modelling and forecasting fresh agro-food commodity consumption per capita in Malaysia using machine learning

Rayner Alfred and Christylyn Leikson and Bonaventure Boniface and Geofrey Harvey Tanakinjal and Assis Kamu and Mori Kogid and Stephen L. Sondoh and Nolila Mohd Nawi and Nalini Arumugam and Ryan Macdonell Andrias (2022) Modelling and forecasting fresh agro-food commodity consumption per capita in Malaysia using machine learning. Mobile Information Systems, 2022. pp. 1-17. ISSN 1574-017X

[img] Text
FULL TEXT.pdf
Restricted to Registered users only

Download (2MB) | Request a copy

Abstract

Tis study focuses on identifying and analyzing spending trend profles and developing the per capita consumption models to forecast the fresh agro-food per capita consumption in Malaysia. Previous published works have looked at statistical and machine learning methods to forecast the demand of agro-food such as ARIMA and SVM methods. However, ordinary least squares (OLS) and neural network (NN) methods have shown better results in modelling time series data. For that reason, the primary objective of this study is to model and forecast the consumption per capita (PCC) of several selected fresh agrofood commodities in Malaysia using the OLS and NN methods. Te secondary objectives of the paper include investigating the performance of OLS against NNs with three diferent topologies, discussing the correlation between Malaysia GDP per capita and the agro-food commodity PCC, and fnally assessing whether the PCC data are increasing over time or decreasing over time and whether the trend in either direction is statistically signifcant by using the Mann–Kendall statistical test. Based on the results of the agro-food consumption per capita (PCC) forecasting, several critical agro-food commodities are also identifed in this work. Te material of the study consists of the per capita consumption of thirty-three (33) agro-food items that can be categorized into rice, livestock, vegetables, fsheries, and fruits, total gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, and the total population of Malaysia between 2010 and 2017. Based on the results obtained, the neural network (NNT1 ) model was found to produce the lowest total MSE of 17.95, for all 33 fresh agro-food investigated in this study. Several agro-food commodities have been identifed as having signifcant positive (e.g., rice, spinach, cabbage, celery cabbage, eggplant, cucumber, poultry, lamb, squid, tuna, star fruit, jackfruit, durian, sweet corn, and coconut) or negative (e.g., pork, mackerel, papaya, guava, mangosteen, pineapple, banana, rambutan, and watermelon) trends using the Mann–Kendall trend test. Tis study also demonstrated that the production of critical agro-food commodities (e.g., rice, chili, cabbage, celery cabbage, poultry (chicken/duck), beef, lamb, crab, mango, and coconut) should be improved to ensure self-sufciency ratios (SSRs) of more than 100% to accommodate the increased projected consumption in Malaysia by the year 2025. Tis paper concludes that neural network methods produce better prediction, and future works include forecasting agro-food demand based on other independent variables such as weather conditions, disease outbreak, and stock market trends. Tere is a need to explore further the capability of ensemble models or hybrid models based on deep learning methods using multi-source data, as these have been shown to improve the performance of the base model. With these ensemble models combined with multi-source data, a more comprehensive analysis of the PCC can be obtained.

Item Type: Article
Keyword: Food supply. Food industry, Stock market
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HB Economic theory. Demography > HB1-3840 Economic theory. Demography > HB801-843 Consumption. Demand
H Social Sciences > HD Industries. Land use. Labor > HD28-9999 Industries. Land use. Labor > HD1401-2210 Agriculture
Department: FACULTY > Faculty of Computing and Informatics
Depositing User: SITI AZIZAH BINTI IDRIS -
Date Deposited: 07 Jul 2025 15:01
Last Modified: 07 Jul 2025 15:01
URI: https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/44358

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item