Keywords
BENEFITSREVENUE
RURAL COMMUNITIES
PROFITS
VALUES
LIVING CONDITIONS
REVENUES
THEORY
PRODUCTIVITY
WELFARE GAINS
POPULATION DENSITIES
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
COMPETITIVENESS
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
SUPPLY
ECONOMIC VALUE
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
DURABLE GOODS
COSTS
INCOME GROUPS
QUALITY STANDARDS
ECONOMY
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
GOODS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
FISHERIES
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RENT
MARKETS
TRANSACTION COSTS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
GDP PER CAPITA
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
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OWNERSHIP
WAGES
DECISIONS
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PROPERTY
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NATIONAL INCOME
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CAPITAL GOODS
TRADE TAXES
TAXES
TRADE
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
CREDIT
OIL
ECONOMIES
LAND
FOOD PRODUCTION
DRYLANDS
CAPITAL
DISTRIBUTION
GDP
DEVELOPMENT
EFFICIENCY
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
LABOR FORCE
COST EFFECTIVENESS
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
CAPITAL MARKETS
MARKET POWER
FISH
PER CAPITA INCOME
ECONOMIC RENTS
METALS
INPUTS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
SUBSIDIES
POLITICAL ECONOMY
AGRICULTURE
COMPETITION
WTO
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
ECONOMICS
RESOURCES
FARMS
DEBT
ENVIRONMENTAL
TERMS OF TRADE
INTERMEDIATE GOODS
PRODUCTION
TAX REVENUE
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
PRICES
NATURAL RESOURCES
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
OUTCOMES
CLOSED ECONOMIES
UNEMPLOYMENT
INCENTIVES
OLIGOPOLIES
ENVIRONMENT
REAL WAGES
PUBLIC GOODS
AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES
POSITIVE EFFECTS
BUSINESS CYCLES
TRADE REFORMS
PRODUCERS
INVESTMENT
QUOTAS
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
TRADE POLICIES
LABOR MARKETS
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
TRENDS
REAL INCOME
MODELS
INCOME LEVELS
MARKET DISTORTIONS
PRODUCTION COSTS
EXPORTS
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
RISKS
TARIFF BARRIERS
VALUE
TARIFFS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22081Abstract
The expansion of international trade has been essential to development and poverty reduction. Todays economy is unquestionable global. Trade as a proportion of global GDP has approximately doubled since 1975. Markets for goods and services have become increasingly integrated through a fall in trade barriers, with technology helping drive trade costs lower. But trade is not an end in itself. People measure the value of trade by the extent to which it delivers better livelihoods, through higher incomes, greater choice, and a more sustainable future, among other benefits. For the extreme poor living on less than $1.25 a day, the central value of trade is its potential to help transform their lives and those of their families. In this way, there is no doubt that the integration of global markets through trade openness has made a critical contribution to poverty reduction. The number of people living in extreme poverty around the world has fallen by around one billion since 1990. Without the growing participation of developing countries in international trade, and sustained efforts to lower barriers to the integration of markets, it is hard to see how this reduction could have been achieved.Date
2015-06-30Type
ReportIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/220819789287040138
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22081
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