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Agricultural Trade Reform and the Doha Development Agenda

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TLDR
In this article, the authors build on numerous recent analyses of the Doha Development Agenda and agricultural trade, including five very helpful books that appeared in 2004, including a comprehensive, tenth-anniversary retrospective on the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture and numerous unilateral trade and subsidy reforms in developed and developing economies.
Abstract
Agriculture is yet again causing contention in international trade negotiations. It caused long delays to the Uruguay round in the late 1980s and 1990s, and it is again proving to be the major stumbling block in the World Trade Organization's (WTO) Doha round of multilateral trade negotiations (formally known as the Doha Development Agenda, or DDA). This study builds on numerous recent analyses of the Doha Development Agenda and agricultural trade, including five very helpful books that appeared in 2004. One, edited by Aksoy and Beghin (2004), provides details of trends in global agricultural markets and policies, especially as they affect nine commodities of interest to developing countries. Another, edited by Ingco and Winters (2004), includes a wide range of analyses based on papers revised following a conference held just before the aborted WTO trade ministerial meeting in Seattle in 1999. The third, edited by Ingco and Nash (2004), provides a follow-up to the broad global perspective of the Ingco and winters volume: it explores a wide range of key issues and options in agricultural trade reform from a developing-country perspective. The fourth, edited by Anania, Bowman, Carter, and McCalla (2004), is a comprehensive, tenth-anniversary retrospective on the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture and numerous unilateral trade and subsidy reforms in developed, transition, and developing economies. And the fifth, edited by Jank (2004), focuses on implications for Latin America.

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The State of Food and Agriculture

R. B. Sen
- 01 Apr 1962 - 
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Trade Liberalization and Poverty: The Evidence So Far

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Trade, Standards, and Poverty: Evidence from Senegal

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantify income and poverty effects of high-standards trade and integrate labor market effects, by using company and household survey data from the vegetable export chain in Senegal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trade, Standards, and Poverty: Evidence from Senegal

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified income and poverty effects of high-standards trade and integrated labor market effects, by using company and household survey data from the vegetable export chain in Senegal.
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The social cost of foreign exchange reserves

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that assuming reasonable spreads between the yield on reserve assets and the cost of foreign borrowing, the income loss to these countries amounts to close to 1% of GDP, which does not seem too steep a price as an insurance premium against financial crises.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trade, growth, and poverty*

TL;DR: The evidence from individual cases and from cross-country analysis supports the view that globalization leads to faster growth and poverty reduction in poor countries as mentioned in this paper, and they conclude that the increase in growth rates that accompanies expanded trade translates on average into proportionate increases in incomes of the poor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trade Liberalization and Poverty: The Evidence So Far

TL;DR: The authors assesses the current state of evidence on the impact of trade policy reform on poverty in developing countries and argues that there is no simple generalizable conclusion about the relationship between trade liberalization and poverty, and the picture is much less negative than is often suggested.
BookDOI

The Uruguay Round and the developing economies

TL;DR: In this paper, the economic impact of the Uruguay Round on the developing economies has been investigated and thirteen studies designed to assess the economic impacts of the Round on developing economies are presented, with the key conclusions to emerge from the study being that the agriculture agreement achieved a great deal in terms of defining rules for agricultural trade.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trade Liberalisation and Economic Performance: An Overview*

TL;DR: The authors surveys the recent literature on trade liberalisation and economic growth and concludes that trade liberalization generally induces a temporary (but possibly long-lived) increase in growth, and that a major component of this is an increase in productivity.
Book

Disarray in World Food Markets: A Quantitative Assessment

Rodney Tyers, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a model of world food market behaviour is presented, based on the theory of food market distortions, and the effects of existing and new policies on the food market.
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