Seeking Shared Prosperity through Trade

Increasing the trade integration of developing countries can make a vital contribution to boosting shared prosperity, but it also exposes producers and consumers to exogenous shocks that alter relative prices, sometimes positively and sometimes negatively. This paper discusses the short-run effects of trade-related shocks on households to capture the potential welfare impact on the poor. The discussion explores the channels through which trade shocks are transmitted to households in the bottom of the income distribution, namely through consumption, household production, and market-based labor activities. The degree to which price shocks are passed through from borders to point of sale is a key determinant of the gains from trade and the ultimate welfare impact. Trade changes in agriculture directly affect households through their consumption basket. Lower agricultural prices reduce the cost of consumables, but these welfare gains may be offset by lower earnings for households that produce these same goods. Poorer households tend to be net consumers of agricultural products, suggesting a net welfare gain, but agricultural wage workers could suffer from wage cuts. Because poorer households tend to consume relatively fewer nonagricultural products, that is nonessentials, any trade-related shocks to prices of nonagricultural product are likely to be transmitted via labor channels. Despite significant evidence that nonagricultural trade reform ultimately leads to job creation and enhanced productivity, the short-run effects can be mixed. The costs incurred by workers to transition to new jobs slow the adjustment of the economy to a new steady state. Labor mobility costs, which tend to be higher in developing countries and for unskilled workers, reduce the potential gains to trade by diverting labor market adjustment from its most efficient path.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cali, Massimiliano, Hollweg, Claire H., Ruppert Bulmer, Elizabeth
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-06
Subjects:NEW MARKET, MARKET STRUCTURE, ECONOMIC GROWTH, CLOSED ECONOMIES, PRODUCTION, REMOTE REGIONS, PRICE INCREASES, SKILLED WORKERS, BARRIER, EXPORT SECTORS, GLOBAL MARKETS, INCOME, PERFECT COMPETITION, EMERGING ECONOMIES, EXCHANGE, EXPORTS, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, ELASTICITY, DEVELOPING ECONOMIES, POLITICAL ECONOMY, SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC GROWTH, INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION, WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS, WELFARE, INCENTIVES, DISTRIBUTION, TRADE REFORMS, DOMESTIC PRICE, SUBSIDY, PRICE, REAL INCOME, INPUTS, MARKET ACCESS, DEVELOPING COUNTRY, SAFETY NETS, DEVELOPMENT, COMMUNICATIONS, LABOR MARKET, INFLUENCE, FOREIGN TRADE, PRODUCTION STRUCTURE, ENTRY POINTS, COSTS, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, EXPORT GROWTH, LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES, TRADE BLOCS, REGIONAL TRADE, FOOD PRICE, PRODUCTIVITY, GLOBALIZATION, BARRIERS TO ENTRY, MARKETS, CONNECTIVITY, CAPITAL ASSETS, TOTAL COSTS, SOCIAL PROTECTION, INCOME LEVELS, MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES, PRICE ELASTICITY, TRADE POLICY, INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION, GLOBAL EXPORTS, PRICE SUBSIDIES, TRADE COMPETITIVENESS, ECONOMIC REFORM, SUBSIDIES, COMMODITY PRICE, TRADE POLICIES, LIBERALIZATION, TAXES, UNEMPLOYMENT, EQUITY, POINT OF SALE, AGRICULTURAL SHOCKS, CONSUMPTION, WAGES, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, BARRIERS, STATE CAPTURE, VALUE, COMPETITIVENESS, MACROECONOMICS, PURCHASING POWER, DEMAND, SAFETY NET, ECONOMY, AGRICULTURE, CONSUMERS, INCOMES, JOB CREATION, MEASUREMENT, SHARES, OPPORTUNITY COSTS, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES, OUTPUT, INSURANCE, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, TRADE, FOREIGN COMPETITION, RETAIL SERVICES, GDP, DOMESTIC PRICES, GOODS, MARKET SHARE, SECURITY, DOMESTIC ECONOMY, BILATERAL TRADE, INVESTMENT, EXTREME POVERTY, DOMESTIC COMPETITION, SHARE, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, ADVERSE IMPACT, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, REMOTE LOCATIONS, COMMODITIES, ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, PRIVATE SECTOR GROWTH, FOOD PRICES, LABOR MARKETS, COMMODITY PRICES, OUTCOMES, REMOTE AREAS, COMMODITY, INTERNATIONAL MARKETS, POSITIVE EFFECTS, PRICES, BENEFITS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, INCOME GROUPS, COMPETITION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24649967/seeking-shared-prosperity-through-trade
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/22200
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