GM crop technology and trade restraints: economic implications for Australia and New Zealand
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Date
Authors
Anderson, Kym
Jackson, Lee Ann
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Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
How much might the potential economic benefit from enhanced farm productivity
associated with crop biotechnology adoption by Australia and New Zealand (ANZ) be
offset by a loss of market access abroad for crops that may contain genetically modified
(GM) organisms? This paper uses the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) model
to estimate effects of other countries’ GM policies without and with ANZ farmers
adopting GM varieties of various grains and oilseeds. The gross economic benefits to
ANZ from adopting GM crops under a variety of scenarios could be positive even if
the strict controls on imports from GM-adopting countries by the European Union are
maintained, but not if North-East Asia also applied such trade restaints. From those
gross economic effects would need to be subtracted society’s evaluation of any new food
safety concerns and negative environmental externalities (net of any new environmental
and occupational health benefits), as well as any extra costs of segregation, identity
preservation and consumer search.
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Source
The Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics