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Book ChapterDOI

The Economics of Quarantine and the SPS Agreement: Measuring the effect of food safety standards on African exports to Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a case study of trade between Africa and Europe in agricultural products, from African exporters perspective, and present results from empirical data and analysis on the trade effect of harmonisation of food safety standards within the European Union.
Abstract: Many of the most important food safety issues in international trade today impact on developing countries. These countries, especially those in Sub-Saharan Africa, seek to expand access to international agricultural markets and integrate more fully into the global trade system. Questions of how to balance risk, expanding trade in agricultural products, and health concerns are at the forefront of trade debate. This chapter provides a case study of trade between Africa and Europe in agricultural products, from African exporters perspective. It presents results from empirical data and analysis on the trade effect of harmonisation of food safety standards within the European Union which we offer as a contribution to trade policy discourse on SPS standards and the multilateral trading system. Concern about the health risks of food and appropriate sanitary standards has been increasing in industrialised countries over the past decade (Pinstrup-Andersen 2000). Debate over food safety has been especially prominent in Europe (Nielsen and Anderson 2000). The use of import bans and regulatory intervention by the European Commission is increasingly justified, in part, under the ‘precautionary principle’ which seeks to mitigate against risk even under conditions in which science has not established direct cause and effect relationships. The European Commission's approach has been challenged in trade policy talks, therefore, on the basis that import restrictions have been employed without sufficient support from internationally recognised science.
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey what is (not) learned from the preaccession programmes and the limits of policy diffusion in Egypt and Tunisia and claim that policy diffusion must be distinguished from policy convergence and that policy success must be contextualized by taking into account the role of domestic actors.
Abstract: After the Arab revolts the EU attempted to contribute to the rural development of the Arab Mediterranean states by designing the European Neighbourhood Programme for Agriculture and Rural Development (ENPARD). Through ENPARD the EU tried to diffuse policies that were implemented in the new member states (NMS) and the candidate countries. Based on the experiences of one NMS (Croatia) and one candidate country (Turkey), the article surveys what is (not) learned from the pre-accession programmes and the limits of policy diffusion in Egypt and Tunisia. The article claims that policy diffusion must be distinguished from policy convergence and that policy success must be contextualized by taking into account the role of domestic actors in each case study.

7 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey what is (not) learned from the preaccession programmes and the limits of policy diffusion in Egypt and Tunisia and claim that policy diffusion must be distinguished from policy convergence and that policy success must be contextualized by taking into account the role of domestic actors.
Abstract: After the Arab revolts the EU attempted to contribute to the rural development of the Arab Mediterranean states by designing the European Neighbourhood Programme for Agriculture and Rural Development (ENPARD). Through ENPARD the EU tried to diffuse policies that were implemented in the new member states (NMS) and the candidate countries. Based on the experiences of one NMS (Croatia) and one candidate country (Turkey), the article surveys what is (not) learned from the pre-accession programmes and the limits of policy diffusion in Egypt and Tunisia. The article claims that policy diffusion must be distinguished from policy convergence and that policy success must be contextualized by taking into account the role of domestic actors in each case study.

7 citations