Bolivia - Strengthening Competitiveness for Export Diversification and Inclusive Growth

In this context, a recent World Bank report investigates how Bolivia can achieve greater diversification in the nontraditional sectors through higher compositeness. The report identifies the main constraints with an emphasis on transport and logistics, paramount for a landlocked country. The report analyses how Bolivia's opening to foreign trade since the mid 1980s has affected economic growth, employment, and poverty. The analysis further assesses the role of Bolivia's current preferential trade agreements on those key economic indicators. Rapidly rising inflation poses a threat to the competitiveness of Bolivian exporters. Inflation climbed to 12 percent at end-2007, up from 5 percent in 2006, increasing the price of Bolivian exports. The higher inflation is the result of such variables as the global rise in food prices, a slow supply response attributable to low private investment, increased aggregate demand fueled by remit tends to under-export relative to other countries.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sakho, Seynabou, Calvo-Gonzalez, Oscar
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2008-07
Subjects:ACCESS TO WORLD MARKETS, AGGREGATE DEMAND, AIR, AIR FREIGHT, AIR TRANSPORT, AIRPORTS, BORDER CROSSINGS, BORDER TRADE, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, CONSOLIDATION, CROSSING, CURRENCY, CUSTOMS, CUSTOMS ADMINISTRATION, DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY, DOMESTIC MARKETS, DOMESTIC PRODUCERS, DUTY DRAWBACKS, ECONOMETRIC ESTIMATES, ECONOMETRIC MODELS, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, ECONOMIC DISTORTIONS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC POLICY, EXPORT BANS, EXPORT BIAS, EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS, EXPORT CONTROLS, EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION, EXPORT GROWTH, EXPORT MARKETS, EXPORT PERFORMANCE, EXPORT PROMOTION, EXPORT PROMOTION AGENCY, EXPORT RESTRICTIONS, EXPORT SECTOR, EXPORT SECTORS, EXPORTER, EXPORTERS, EXPORTS, EXTERNAL TARIFF, FOOD PRICES, FOREIGN TRADE, FREE TRADE, FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS, GDP, HEAVY RELIANCE, HUMAN CAPITAL, IMPORT, IMPORT DUTIES, IMPORT TARIFFS, IMPORTS, INFLATION, INTERNATIONAL MARKET, INTERNATIONAL MARKETS, INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS, LEVELS OF GROWTH, LEVERAGE, LEVERAGES, MONETARY POLICY, NATURAL RESOURCE, NATURAL RESOURCES, OPEN MARKET, OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS, OPEN TRADE REGIME, OUTSOURCING, POLITICAL INSTABILITY, POLITICAL STABILITY, POVERTY REDUCTION, PREFERENTIAL ACCESS, PREFERENTIAL ACCESS TO MARKETS, PREFERENTIAL AGREEMENTS, PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS, PREFERENTIAL TRADE, PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS, PRICE INCREASES, PRIVATE INVESTMENT, PRODUCTION INPUTS, QUALITY OF TRANSPORT, REAL APPRECIATION, REGIONAL INTEGRATION, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, ROAD, SUPPLY RESPONSE, TARIFF INCREASE, TARIFF POLICY, TAX, TAX POLICY, TOTAL IMPORTS, TRADE CONTROL, TRADE FACILITATION, TRADE INTEGRATION, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, TRADE POLICY, TRADE PROMOTION, TRADE RELATIONS, TRADE VOLUMES, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT CAPACITY, TRANSPORT COSTS, TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT, TRIP, TRIP TIME, UNCERTAINTY, WORLD MARKETS, WORLD PRICES, WORLD TRADE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/07/10133637/bolivia-strengthening-competitiveness-export-diversification-inclusive-growth
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10276
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