The Cost of Rich (and Poor) Country Protection to Developing Countries

The Cost of Rich (and Poor) Country Protection to Developing Countries

Author: 
Anderson, Kym
Place: 
Oxford
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press
Date published: 
2001
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Dimaranan, Betina, jt. author
Francois, Joe, jt. author
Hertel, Tom, jt. author
Hoekman, Bernard, jt. author
Martin, Will, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Journal of African Economies
Source: 
Journal of African Economies Volume 10 Issue 3 Sep 2001 pp. 227-257
Abstract: 

This study confirms that substantial barriers to market access will remain in both rich and poor countries following full implementation of the Uruguay Round agreement. The analysis finds that approximately 40% of the costs of these barriers to developing countries arise from barriers to market access in industrial countries and 60% from barriers in developing countries themselves. The results suggest that there would be large gains to almost all regions from a round of negotiations that increased market access in the North and South. In Africa, the potential static gains from multilateral reform appear to exceed those from preferential liberalisation, without the well?known disadvantages of a preferential approach.

Language: 

CITATION: Anderson, Kym. The Cost of Rich (and Poor) Country Protection to Developing Countries . Oxford : Oxford University Press , 2001. Journal of African Economies Volume 10 Issue 3 Sep 2001 pp. 227-257 - Available at: https://library.au.int/cost-rich-and-poor-country-protection-developing-countries