Agricultural trade distortions during the global financial crisis
Import barriers are often raised during turbulent times, as governments worry about immediate domestic concerns such as unemployment. The recent global financial crisis, however, was accompanied by an exogenous upward spike in the international price of food, which led some countries to raise <italic>export</italic> barriers, thereby exacerbating both the price spike and the international welfare transfer associated with that change in the terms of trade. As in previous price-spike periods, that response by some food-exporting countries was accompanied by a <italic>lowering</italic> of import restrictions by numerous food-importing countries, further exacerbating the international price spike. This paper provides new evidence up to 2010 on the extent of the change in domestic relative to international prices in both groups of countries, and compares it with responses during two previous food price-spike periods. It concludes that there is a need for stronger World Trade Organization disciplines on export as well as import restrictions, so as to limit the extent to which beggar-thy-neighbour government responses to international price spikes (up or down) exacerbate those shocks. Copyright 2012, Oxford University Press.
Year of publication: |
2012
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Authors: | Anderson, Kym ; Nelgen, Signe |
Published in: |
Oxford Review of Economic Policy. - Oxford University Press. - Vol. 28.2012, 2, p. 235-260
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Publisher: |
Oxford University Press |
Saved in:
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