Reforming Agricultural Trade for Developing Countries : Volume 1. Key Issues for a Pro-Development Outcome of the Doha Round

Reforming agricultural trade for developing countries is a two-volume set. The first volume is subtitled Key issues for a pro- development outcome of the Doha Round, and it is focused on specific concerns that are being encountered in the agricultural negotiations, and on strategies for dealing with them to arrive at a final agreement that will significantly spur growth and reduce poverty in developing countries. The companion volume is subtitled Quantifying the impact of multilateral trade reform. It comprises chapters that take different approaches to modeling trade reform and quantifying the resulting benefits and costs to various players in the negotiations. The study explains the differences in results that come out of these different approaches, and compares them to some other recent estimates of the gains from global trade reform.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McCalla, Alex F., Nash, John
Language:en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2007
Subjects:Agreement on Agriculture, Agricultural Commodities, agricultural development, agricultural export subsidies, agricultural exporters, Agricultural Negotiations, Agricultural Policies, Agricultural Production, Agricultural Products, agricultural sector, agricultural subsidies, Agricultural Support, Agricultural Support Policies, Agricultural Trade, Agricultural Trade Liberalization, Agriculture, applicable law, Average Tariffs, balance of payments, barriers to exports, barriers to imports, bilateral negotiations, border measures, Border Protection, Bound Tariff, capacity building, competitive advantage, Competitiveness, consumers, country markets, Customs, Customs Duty, Development Assistance, development strategy, differential treatment, Direct Payments, domestic prices, domestic producers, Domestic Support, Domestic Support Policies, dumping, Economic Cooperation, economic efficiency, economic growth, Emergency Safeguards, European Union, exchange rates, Export Competition, export credit, export sales, export sector, Export Subsidies, Export Subsidy, Export Subsidy Commitments, exporting countries, Exports, final agreement, Final Products, Food Aid, Food Imports, food products, food security, foreign exchange, free access, GDP, GDP per Capita, global economy, global level, global markets, global trade, Global Trade Analysis, global trading, high tariffs, import barriers, Import Competition, Import Quota, importing countries, Income, International Bank, international community, international trade, labor intensive, Latin American, macroeconomic policies, manufactured goods, Market Access, Ministerial Meeting, Most-Favored-Nation Tariff, multilateral negotiations, multilateral trade, multilateral trade agreements, multilateral trade negotiations, multilateral trade reform, natural resources, net effect, Net Exports, Oil Imports, overvalued exchange rates, Phytosanitary Measures, political economy, preferential access, preferential trade, preferential trade policy, Price Changes, Price Risk, protectionism, purchasing power, reduction commitments, regional groups, special treatment, State Trading, State Trading Enterprises, Sub-Saharan Africa, Subsidized Exports, Tariff Rate, Tariff rate quota, Tariff Rate Quotas, Tariff Rates, tariff structures, taxation, terms of trade, trade agreements, trade among developing countries, Trade Balance, trade barriers, Trade Disputes, trade distortions, trade effect, trade facilitation, Trade Liberalization, trade measure, trade measures, Trade Negotiations, Trade Policy, Trade Policy Reform, trade policy reforms, Trade Reforms, trade regimes, trade rounds, trade taxes, trade-distorting subsidies, trading system, Transition Economies, unilateral reduction, Uruguay Round, Value Added, world market, world markets, World Prices, World Trade, World Trade Organization, WTO,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10986/13519
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