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Searching with a thematic focus on Trade Policy, Trade Liberalisation, Liberalisation Impacts, liberalisation impacts poverty
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Can trade reform reduce global poverty?
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2003This paper looks at the issue of trade reform in the context of the current development policy agenda.DocumentTrade and poverty: background briefing
Department for International Development, UK, 2002The reduction in barriers to international trade can increase and create incomes for the poor and provide more resources to fight poverty.This paper:describes the impact of liberalisation on household and individual income levels identifies three channels through which trade reform affects poverty, that is prices, enterprise and government revenueanalyses how policy-making decisDocumentMultilateral trade liberalization and poverty reduction
Federal Agricultural Research Centre, Germany, 2000This study assesses the likely impacts of trade liberalisation on the incidence of poverty. The study attempts to maintain a multi-country focus on liberalisation by comparing experience in 5 countries (Thailand, Zambia, India )Approach:The authors simulate a global model to determine regional price changes owing to a policy experiment.DocumentMarket access for developing countries’ exports
International Monetary Fund, 2001This article praises the the positive effects (economic growth, development, poverty reduction) of economic integration. This has largely been achieved by economic liberalization. Although integration has certainly benefited some countries, the benefits of integration have been uneven. Some countries have been marginalised by this process.DocumentEconomic reforms and poverty alleviation in Tanzania
Economic and Social Research Foundation, Tanzania, 1997The aim of the study was to identify and analyse the impacts of economic reform programmes and policies on poverty alleviation. In particular it examined how economic reforms impinge on poverty alleviation (directly or indirectly) in Tanzania’s rural and urban settings to the extent allowed by secondary data available.DocumentWTO: Understanding the Development Angle [Trade and Development Background Briefings]
Institute of Development Studies UK, 1999Series of 10 short background papers, each on a different aspect of the WTO agenda and describing how developing countries may be affected by different outcomes, and what preparations they need to make to participate effectively. Developing countries have joined the WTO in large numbers, in the expectation that its objectives of rule-based liberal trade will foster development.Pages
