Agricultural and trade policy reforms in Latin America: impacts on markets and welfare
Loading...
Date
Authors
Valenzuela, Ernesto
Anderson, Kym
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
United Nations
Abstract
Farm earnings in Latin America have been depressed by pro-urban and anti-trade biases in
national policies and by agricultural support policies of richer countries. These policies have
reduced economic welfare, hampered trade and growth, and may well have added to income
. Since the 1980s, however, the region has reduced its sectoral and trade policy
distortions; and some high-income countries also have begun reducing market-distorting
aspects of their farm policies. This paper synthesizes results from a World Bank project that
provides: price-comparison based measures of the extent to which national policies have
changed farmers’ price incentives; partial equilibrium indexes of the impact of farm policies
on trade and economic welfare; general equilibrium estimates of trade, welfare and poverty
effects of global reforms retrospectively and prospectively; comparisons with similar
estimates for Asia, Africa and high-income countries; and a discussion of prospects for pro-poor
policy reform of agricultural price and trade policies.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Cepal Review
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access