Border Price and Export Demand Shocks for Developing Countries from Rest-of-World Trade Liberalization Using the Linkage Model
The volume on agricultural price distortions, inequality and poverty begins with a global study that uses the World Bank's linkage model to examine the economic impacts in various countries, regions and the world as a whole of agricultural and...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2017
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/436021468157502709/Border-price-and-export-demand-shocks-for-developing-countries-from-rest-of-world-trade-liberalization-using-the-linkage-model http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28146 |
Summary: | The volume on agricultural price
distortions, inequality and poverty begins with a global
study that uses the World Bank's linkage model to
examine the economic impacts in various countries, regions
and the world as a whole of agricultural and trade policies
as of 2004. It does so by shocking that model with the
removal of all agricultural price-distorting domestic and
border policies with, and without, the removal of trade
policies affecting all other goods. That pair of shocks is
also employed in another global study in that volume to
examine the inequality and poverty implications of those
price-distorting policies for more than 100 countries. Then
for ten national studies reported in that volume, the
Linkage model again is used, but only to provide an
exogenous set of shocks to the national economy wide model
employed by the authors of each developing country case
study. The effects of that shock on a national economy are
then compared with the effects of own-country liberalization
using the same national model and the same agricultural
protection rates for that country as in the global Linkage
model. In this appendix the authors describe the main
assumptions adopted to generate the border price and export
demand shocks from agricultural and trade policy reforms by
the rest of the world, and how that is communicated to the
national models. |
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