In Africa the global food crisis threatens the livelihoods of millions of people who because of high rates of poverty, hunger, malnutrition, and food dependency are already exceptionally vulnerable. In better circumstances, Africa's agricultural sector would respond to rising prices by increasing food supply. But such a response is impossible without significant new policy actions on both the production and marketing of African agriculture. This paper assesses the likely impacts of two strategic policy options: doubling African staples production, and improving "market access" through regional integration and lowering transaction costs. Using an economywide multimarket model for 17 African economies and econometrically estimated parameters ...
Transforming Africa’s economic development requires a shift away from its characteristic dependence ...
Africa now needs 14 million tonnes more grain each year than it is producing. With the population gr...
There are certain key issues which - for the foreseeable future - will undeniably remain central to ...
In Africa the global food crisis threatens the livelihoods of millions of people who because of high...
The current global food crisis has reemphasized the costliness of Africa's failure to achieve food s...
Rapid growth in the agricultural sector is central to any strategy for slashing poverty and hunger o...
African countries continue to face deepening food crises which have been accentuated by the global f...
This paper critically reviews the effects of the global food and financial crises on developing coun...
Commodity price increases are viewed as a major catalyst in spurring economic development by increas...
In today’s more integrated world economy, agricultural growth in Africa depends not only on raising ...
At the national level, dozens of African countries have pledged to implement the Comprehensive Afric...
International prices of most staple food commodities in 2008 reached a remarkable level that had not...
Paper presented at the International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium Analytic Symposium “Conf...
The sub-Saharan African Region, unlike other developing regions, has made little progress in the pas...
"Wealthy countries' agricultural subsidies have also created unfair competition. African farmers not...
Transforming Africa’s economic development requires a shift away from its characteristic dependence ...
Africa now needs 14 million tonnes more grain each year than it is producing. With the population gr...
There are certain key issues which - for the foreseeable future - will undeniably remain central to ...
In Africa the global food crisis threatens the livelihoods of millions of people who because of high...
The current global food crisis has reemphasized the costliness of Africa's failure to achieve food s...
Rapid growth in the agricultural sector is central to any strategy for slashing poverty and hunger o...
African countries continue to face deepening food crises which have been accentuated by the global f...
This paper critically reviews the effects of the global food and financial crises on developing coun...
Commodity price increases are viewed as a major catalyst in spurring economic development by increas...
In today’s more integrated world economy, agricultural growth in Africa depends not only on raising ...
At the national level, dozens of African countries have pledged to implement the Comprehensive Afric...
International prices of most staple food commodities in 2008 reached a remarkable level that had not...
Paper presented at the International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium Analytic Symposium “Conf...
The sub-Saharan African Region, unlike other developing regions, has made little progress in the pas...
"Wealthy countries' agricultural subsidies have also created unfair competition. African farmers not...
Transforming Africa’s economic development requires a shift away from its characteristic dependence ...
Africa now needs 14 million tonnes more grain each year than it is producing. With the population gr...
There are certain key issues which - for the foreseeable future - will undeniably remain central to ...