Bazaars and Trade Integration in CAREC Countries
This paper based on survey work as well as an examination of trade statistics is the first to have studied the economic and trade effects of bazaars in central Asia in a detailed way. It presents a wealth of information and statistics relating to c...
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Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/05/11102940/bazaars-trade-integration-central-asia-regional-economic-cooperation-carec-countries http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18609 |
Summary: | This paper based on survey work as well
as an examination of trade statistics is the first to have
studied the economic and trade effects of bazaars in central
Asia in a detailed way. It presents a wealth of information
and statistics relating to critical income generating
activities and seeks to uncover the vital role played by
bazaars in supporting economic growth. The analysis
conducted in this work is of policy interest: rather than
treating bazaars as unorganized and undesirable features of
a modern market economy, national authorities should foster
the development of bazaars in view of the growth,
employment-generation and poverty-fighting characteristics
of the operations of bazaars. Indeed, without
well-functioning bazaars, the cost of trade would be
considerably greater, the prices of goods higher and
availability more restricted, trade volumes considerably
lower, and the powerful welfare-raising effects from
re-exports (in which bazaars play a critical role) as well
as trade itself would be greatly muted. The populations
would be much the poorer. The remainder of this report is
organized as follows: section one provides birds'
eye-view of networks of bazaars: their structure and weight
in local economies as well as their involvement in domestic
and foreign trade activities. Section two provides estimates
of trade mediated by bazaars based on both mirror, i.e.,
Central Asian's (CA's) trading partners'
trade statistics and national statistics of Kazakhstan and
Kyrgyzstan. Section three presents conclusions and outlines
policy implications of empirical findings. |
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