CIRS Series – Vol.II.B.03 Food System Structural Architecture
Continuation File: Vol-II.B.03_Targeted_Incentive_Deployment_Model.txt
Date: 2026-02-15

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TITLE: Targeted Incentive Deployment Model

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I. PURPOSE

This document defines how structural incentives are deployed following
regional fragility band classification.

Vol.II does not apply uniform intervention.

Incentives activate proportionally based on demonstrated structural
need.

Deployment must remain precise, limited, and reversible.

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II. DEPLOYMENT PRINCIPLES

Incentives must:

• Address specific fragility drivers • Avoid distortion of healthy
regions • Preserve market competition • Encourage private participation
• Sunset upon structural stabilization

Activation without exit criteria increases dependency.

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III. INCENTIVE CATEGORIES

Incentives may fall into the following categories:

1.  Processing Density Reinforcement
2.  Storage Buffer Expansion
3.  Mid-Scale Capital Access Facilitation
4.  Transport Route Diversification
5.  Input Elasticity Expansion

Each category corresponds to identified fragility drivers.

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IV. BAND-ALIGNED ACTIVATION

Band A – No activation

Band B – Monitoring and optional participation programs

Band C – Targeted incentive availability for specific fragility
indicators

Band D – Coordinated multi-layer incentive eligibility

Intervention scales with structural vulnerability.

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V. CAPITAL ACCESS FACILITATION

Where mid-scale erosion is documented, incentives may include:

• Infrastructure loan guarantees • Co-investment models • Regional bond
instruments • Equipment modernization support

Facilitation reduces capital friction without mandating expansion.

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VI. STORAGE AND BUFFER SUPPORT

Where compression risk exceeds resilience bands:

• Modular storage incentives may activate • Cold-chain reinforcement
financing may apply • Inventory transparency platforms may deploy

Buffer expansion must be proportional to demonstrated compression risk.

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VII. PROCESSING DIVERSIFICATION SUPPORT

Where bottleneck centrality is elevated:

• Incentives may encourage regional facility development • Shared
processing models may be supported • Cooperative throughput structures
may be enabled

Diversification increases rerouting capacity.

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VIII. INPUT ELASTICITY PROGRAMS

Where correlation sensitivity is high:

• Diversified input sourcing programs may activate • Alternative
fertilizer development support may apply • Regional feed flexibility
initiatives may deploy

Reducing synchronization reduces volatility amplification.

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IX. SUNSET AND REVIEW CONDITIONS

All incentives must include:

• Defined review intervals • Structural metric reassessment • Automatic
sunset upon threshold normalization • Transparency reporting

Incentives are corrective tools, not permanent subsidies.

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X. STRUCTURAL CONCLUSION

Targeted Incentive Deployment operationalizes Vol.II sequencing.

It ensures:

• Proportional response • Structural specificity • Market compatibility
• Reversibility • Transparency

Durability grows through precision, not expansion.

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