This study provides a quantitative estimate of the potential economic consequences of multilateral trade reform under the WTO for Africa using a framework that explicitly incorporates issues of concern to the region, such as preference erosion, loss of tariff revenue, and trade facilitation. It also examines the impact of OECD agricultural support programmes on economic welfare and specialisation in Africa. In the static version of the GTAP model, the study finds that full liberalisation of trade would increase global welfare (income) by 0.3 per cent, but would add 0.7 per cent annually to income in the African region. Sub-Saharan Africa and, to a lesser extent, Southern Africa, are vulnerable to partial trade reforms as they incur losses f...
The LINKAGE model of the global economy and the latest Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) databas...
African countries tend to be affected by global agricultural policies in the same way as other econo...
Free trade between countries and regions has become a common practice and yet there are imbalances i...
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...
An earlier version is circulated as CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5049, London and as World Bank Policy ...
This article reports the results of a static computable general equilibrium (CGE) model on the possi...
This study provides a quantitative evaluation of the Doha Round in terms of the market access for in...
This paper examines whether the Sub-Saharan African economies could gain from multilateral trade re...
This paper examines the extent to which various regions, and the world as a whole, could gain from m...
African countries tend to be affected by global agricultural policies in the same way as other econo...
An earlier version is circulated as CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5156, London, September 2005 and as Wo...
The link between trade liberalization and poverty reduction is more or less ambigious. For the case ...
This study tries to quantify the concerns that have been raised often on adjustment costs likely to ...
The LINKAGE model of the global economy and the latest Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) databas...
African countries tend to be affected by global agricultural policies in the same way as other econo...
Free trade between countries and regions has become a common practice and yet there are imbalances i...
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...
An earlier version is circulated as CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5049, London and as World Bank Policy ...
This article reports the results of a static computable general equilibrium (CGE) model on the possi...
This study provides a quantitative evaluation of the Doha Round in terms of the market access for in...
This paper examines whether the Sub-Saharan African economies could gain from multilateral trade re...
This paper examines the extent to which various regions, and the world as a whole, could gain from m...
African countries tend to be affected by global agricultural policies in the same way as other econo...
An earlier version is circulated as CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5156, London, September 2005 and as Wo...
The link between trade liberalization and poverty reduction is more or less ambigious. For the case ...
This study tries to quantify the concerns that have been raised often on adjustment costs likely to ...
The LINKAGE model of the global economy and the latest Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) databas...
African countries tend to be affected by global agricultural policies in the same way as other econo...
Free trade between countries and regions has become a common practice and yet there are imbalances i...