This study provides a quantitative evaluation of the Doha Round in terms of the market access for industrial products and the possible consequences of the trade liberalization process. It analysis the impact of the reforms put forward by the July Package concluded in Geneva. The tariff reduction scenarios under review fit in with the commitments undertaken in the July Package. All four scenarios reviewed are based on a Girard formula. The first, third and fourth scenarios are ambitious, whereas the second is more conservative. Scenarios 1, 3 and 4 differ in the way they factor in special and differential (S&D) treatment. In terms of impact, the simulations show that a liberalization scenario based on an ambitious, non-linear Girard form...
Since 2002, the Sub-Saharan African countries2 embarked on the negotiations of free-trade agreements...
African countries have not embraced trade liberalization in the manner that other developing regions...
An earlier version is circulated as CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5049, London and as World Bank Policy ...
This study provides a quantitative estimate of the potential economic consequences of multilateral t...
This study provides a quantitative estimate of the potential economic consequences of multilateral t...
This paper provides a quantitative estimate of the potential economic consequences of multilateral t...
In this study the key elements of the WTO Doha round are simulated and the main im-plications for in...
This Policy Discussion Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views ...
In the background of the Doha Round of trade negotiations, this study proposes a CGE assessment of m...
The Doha ministerial declaration concerning market access for non-agricultural products states that ...
The link between trade liberalization and poverty reduction is more or less ambigious. For the case ...
This study contains a careful, detailed examination of the likely macroeconomic impacts of tariff co...
This paper assesses the effects of reducing tariffs under the Doha Round on market access for develo...
This article reports the results of a static computable general equilibrium (CGE) model on the possi...
In the background of the Doha Round of trade negotiations, this study proposes a CGE assessment of m...
Since 2002, the Sub-Saharan African countries2 embarked on the negotiations of free-trade agreements...
African countries have not embraced trade liberalization in the manner that other developing regions...
An earlier version is circulated as CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5049, London and as World Bank Policy ...
This study provides a quantitative estimate of the potential economic consequences of multilateral t...
This study provides a quantitative estimate of the potential economic consequences of multilateral t...
This paper provides a quantitative estimate of the potential economic consequences of multilateral t...
In this study the key elements of the WTO Doha round are simulated and the main im-plications for in...
This Policy Discussion Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views ...
In the background of the Doha Round of trade negotiations, this study proposes a CGE assessment of m...
The Doha ministerial declaration concerning market access for non-agricultural products states that ...
The link between trade liberalization and poverty reduction is more or less ambigious. For the case ...
This study contains a careful, detailed examination of the likely macroeconomic impacts of tariff co...
This paper assesses the effects of reducing tariffs under the Doha Round on market access for develo...
This article reports the results of a static computable general equilibrium (CGE) model on the possi...
In the background of the Doha Round of trade negotiations, this study proposes a CGE assessment of m...
Since 2002, the Sub-Saharan African countries2 embarked on the negotiations of free-trade agreements...
African countries have not embraced trade liberalization in the manner that other developing regions...
An earlier version is circulated as CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5049, London and as World Bank Policy ...