In a nutshell focuses on the 1994 GATT/WTO Agriculture Agreement and other agreement of the Uruguay Round which are of relevance to global agricultural trade

Industrial countries subsdise their agricultural sector by protecting them from competition and by subsidising exports, which have tended to lower international prices. In contrast, developing countries have tended to tax agriculture and subsidise domestic prices, which have discouraged production, encouraged consumption and increased import demand.Generally, agricultural trade liberalisation is expected to expand global trade and contribute to higher income growth. The challenge is to ensure that countries are choosing to implement their commitments in the spirit of the Agreement on Agriculture and that further commitments of liberalisation are carried out

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 44265 Arlington, H., 57072 Chesney, D., Antoine, Patrick 43116, 68752 Francis, D., 1280 IICA, Port-of-Spain (Trinidad y Tobago)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Port-of-Spain (Trinidad y Tobago) [199
Subjects:TRINIDAD Y TOBAGO, LIBERALIZACION DEL INTERCAMBIO, RONDA URUGUAY, ACUERDOS COMERCIALES, AGRICULTURA,
Online Access:https://repositorio.iica.int/handle/11324/12814
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Summary:Industrial countries subsdise their agricultural sector by protecting them from competition and by subsidising exports, which have tended to lower international prices. In contrast, developing countries have tended to tax agriculture and subsidise domestic prices, which have discouraged production, encouraged consumption and increased import demand.Generally, agricultural trade liberalisation is expected to expand global trade and contribute to higher income growth. The challenge is to ensure that countries are choosing to implement their commitments in the spirit of the Agreement on Agriculture and that further commitments of liberalisation are carried out