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Economic impact of the Round: comparison of recent studies

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For Hertel and Keeney, adding services to merchandise trade liberalisation ... CEPII, Hertel and Keeney, Swedish National Board of Trade, IFPRI and others find ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Economic impact of the Round: comparison of recent studies


1
Economic impact of the Round comparison of
recent studies
European Commission
2
Economic impact of the Round comparison of
recent studies
  • As the issue is clearly global (at world scale),
    all studies use a similar type of economic tool
  • General Equilibrium Model
  • (model representing the world economy as a
    network of economic interactions)
  • 2 different sources of divergence in the results
  • - Different scenarios
  • - Different technical assumptions on how
    markets react
  • However, from the set of studies available, some
    clear converging conclusions can be drawn.

3
Services and trade facilitation major potential
gains of the round
  • For CEPII, agriculture would contribute 25 of
    world income gains, industrial products 32 and
    services 43
  • For Hertel and Keeney, adding services to
    merchandise trade liberalisation boosts global
    gains by 80 percent, from 84Bn to more than
    150Bn
  • For Swedish National Board of Trade (as for other
    studies), overall gains double when taking trade
    facilitation into account
  • For Sub-Saharan Africa, benefits linked to trade
    facilitation could be equivalent to a doubling of
    official development aid for this region

4
Merchandise most of the gains are not in
agriculture
Results for Doha scenarios regarding merchandise
trade liberalisation
  • Different DDA outcomes are explained by diverging
    assumptions regarding reduction in protection and
    technical assumptions on how markets react
  • World Bank and Carnegie studies are at two
    extremes of the range
  • CEPII, Hertel and Keeney, Swedish National Board
    of Trade, IFPRI and others find more balanced
    results

5
Among DCs, gains from agriculture would be very
unevenly distributed
  • liberalisation limited to agriculture would lead
    to very unbalanced impacts between countries the
    gains are limited to
  • - developed importers that liberalise their
    agricultural trade (EFTA, Korea and Taiwan, and
    to a lesser extent the EU)
  • - to few very competitive exporters (Australia,
    New Zealand, Brazil, Argentina, Thailand)
  • Countries in South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa,
    North-Africa, Middle East, Central Asia, and the
    Caribbean are likely to lose if the Round is
    restricted to agricultural trade reform

6
Benefits of poorest countries are limited by a
number of factors
  • Erosion of their preferential access to developed
    countries markets
  • Adverse terms of trade effects in particular due
    to a rise in food prices
  • If no tariff reductions on their part, no gains
    in efficiency and productivity
  • However,
  • Trade facilitation is key for these countries
    (potential of USD 20bn for SSA)
  • Full duty free coverage of their exports (instead
    of 97 as agreed in Hong Kong) would increase
    income gains for LDCs from USD 8bn from USD 1bn
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