Author(s)
Anderson, KymKeywords
PRESENT VALUEENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT
TRADE FACILITATION
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
TRADE REFORM
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
MULTILATERAL TRADE REFORM
ECONOMIC COOPERATION
ECONOMIC RELATIONS
ECONOMISTS
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
EXPORTS
MULTILATERAL TRADE
COAL
URUGUAY
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
EQUIVALENT VARIATION
ACCOUNTING
VALUE ADDED
TRANSACTION COSTS
WELFARE GAINS
OPEN ECONOMIES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
ECONOMIC EFFECTS
PRODUCTIVITY
DUMPING
WAGES
GDP
SAFETY
STATIC ANALYSIS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
IMPORTS
SECURE PROPERTY RIGHTS
CAPITAL STOCK
TRADE NEGOTIATIONS
TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION
POLITICAL ECONOMY
LAISSEZ FAIRE
WTO
EXPERIMENTS
INTERMEDIATE INPUTS
FISHERIES
AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES
TRADE TAXES
WELFARE EFFECTS
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
POLICY INSTRUMENTS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
SPILLOVERS
STOCKS
WORLD TRADE
GROWTH RATE
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
TRADE AGREEMENTS
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
EMPIRICAL INFORMATION
TRADE DIVERSION
INCREASING RETURNS
INVESTMENT FUNDS
FREE TRADE AREAS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
MINING
BENCHMARK
TRADE POLICY REFORM
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
TRADE POLICIES
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
INCREASING RETURNS TO SCALE
SOCIAL COSTS
CUSTOMS
URUGUAY ROUND
CAPITAL GOODS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
EXTERNALITIES
CONSUMERS
CLIMATE CHANGE
QUOTAS
FISCAL POLICIES
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TAX REVENUES
TERMS OF TRADE
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
TRADE POLICY
FREE TRADE
DIRECT INVESTMENT
SAFETY NETS
UNEMPLOYMENT
EXPENDITURE
NATIONAL OUTPUT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
PRODUCT MARKETS
CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE
FOREIGN COMPETITION
AGRICULTURE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TAXATION
TAX REVENUE
SAVINGS
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
BILATERAL TRADE
UNCERTAINTY
INCOME
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
SETTLEMENT
POLICY INSTRUMENT
HOUSEHOLDS
TRADE BARRIERS
IMPERFECT COMPETITION
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EQUILIBRIUM
WEALTH
ECONOMIC WELFARE
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PRODUCERS
MULTILATERAL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS
EFFICIENT RESOURCE ALLOCATION
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
CLEARANCE
EXPORT SUBSIDIES
POLLUTION
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
FORESTRY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14250Abstract
This is one of 10 studies for the Copenhagen Consensus Project that sought to evaluate the most feasible opportunities to improve welfare globally and alleviate poverty in developing countries. The author argues that phasing out distortionary government subsidies and barriers to international trade will yield an extraordinarily high benefit-cost ratio. A survey is provided of recent estimates using global economy-wide simulation models of the benefits of doing that by way of the current Doha round of multilateral trade negotiations. Even if adjustment costs are several times as large as suggested by available estimates, the benefit-cost ratio from seizing this opportunity exceeds 20. That is much higher than the rewards from regional or bilateral trade agreements or from providing preferential access for least-developed countries' exports to high-income countries. Such reform would simultaneously contribute to alleviating several of the other key challenges reflected in the United Nation's Millennium Development Goals.Date
2013-06-27Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/14250http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14250
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Collections
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