22 results on '"APPAREL EXPORTS"'
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2. The Weave of Challenges: China's Apparel Export Competitiveness in the Face of Zero-COVID Policy
- Author
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Das, Sudipta, Hasan, Md Rokibul, and Das, Debanjan
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. 入世20年我国服装出口贸易特征分析.
- Author
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郭 燕
- Subjects
CROSS-border e-commerce ,CLOTHING industry ,FREE enterprise ,CLOTHING & dress ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Copyright of China Textile Leader is the property of China Textile Information Center and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
4. Association between Sourcing Issues and Logistics Performance Variables in Apparel Exports: An Empirical Analysis of Sourcing Intermediaries
- Author
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Gupta, Anupama, Dasgupta, Pinaki, Arora, Anshu Saxena, editor, and McIntyre, John R., editor
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. People Will Always Remember How You Made Them Feel: The Key Differences Between the Apparel Sections of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the United States, Mexico and Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA).
- Author
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Knox, Jordan Lucas
- Subjects
NORTH American Free Trade Agreement ,U.S. states - Abstract
An analysis of the key differences between the apparel sections of the United States, Mexico, and Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was conducted to determine the amount of progress made in the USMCA deal with regard to apparel exports. However, in evaluating the differences between the trade deals, it became clear that while the U.S. may have won the battle on content; the fight over commerce in North America could reflect the way the deal was negotiated and how that made the United States two closest trading partners feel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Women entrepreneur development in indian textile industry
- Author
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Gurusamy, M., Umamaheswari, P., and Rajasekar, N.
- Published
- 2012
7. An Exploratory Evidence of the Types of Challenges and Opportunities Perceived by the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in the Apparel Export Sector of Pakistan.
- Author
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Khan, Mahwish J.
- Subjects
- *
SMALL business , *TEXTILE industry ,CLOTHING & dress exports & imports - Abstract
Textiles and apparel is the largest industrial sector of Pakistan and plays a significant role in its economy, particularly in export earnings. It has been observed that the small and medium enterprises (SMEs) within the apparel sector also contribute to exports. However, this contribution is marginal when compared to the role played by SMEs of other South Asian apparel exporters. This qualitative study is conducted to explore the challenges and opportunities for the apparel exporting SMEs in Pakistan. After literature review, 6 SMEs - 2 from each apparel clusters of Lahore, Faisalabad and Karachi - were selected using purposive sampling. In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with senior managers at these firms. Findings suggest that the burden of terrorism on the SME is far greater than that of the energy crisis. The energy crisis and compliances drive up the costs of production and reduce international competitiveness of the suppliers. However, terrorism creates an unlevel playing field that has a much larger impact on the overall apparel sector. This study finds that opportunities lie in policy reforms and the GSP Plus Status granted to Pakistan by the European Union. The paper ends by recommending how institutions, bilateral trade and particularly the China Pakistan Economic Corridor can sustain the SME sector of Pakistan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
8. From Jobs to Careers: Apparel Exports and Career Paths for Women in Developing Countries
- Author
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Mexico Alberto Vergara Bahena, Stacey Frederick, Gladys Lopez-Acevedo, and Raymond Robertson
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LABOR MARKET ,Job creation ,Labour economics ,business.industry ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,JOB CREATION ,Developing country ,Clothing ,FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION ,GLOBAL VALUE CHAIN ,GENDER ,APPAREL EMPLOYMENT ,business ,Global value chain - Abstract
It is well-established that bringing more women into the formal labor force is critical for economic development. One strategy often cited is further integrating developing countries into global trade, particularly global value chains (GVCs), to contribute to female labor market outcomes through the expansion of female-intensive industries. As a result, a big question frequently debated, is whether the apparel industry – which is the most female-intensive and globally engaged manufacturing industry – can be a key player in this regard. In recent decades, the apparel industry has shifted its production to low-wage developing countries, increasing the demand for women, closing male-female wage gaps, and bringing women into the formal labor force. Indeed, the benefits of apparel exports have reached the female population, but is an apparel-led export strategy sufficient to induce the transition from jobs to careers? This Report provides an answer by focusing on seven countries where the apparel industry plays an important role in its export basket – Bangladesh, Cambodia, Egypt, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Turkey, and Vietnam. The Report’s key finding is that countries should take advantage of the apparel industry as a launching platform to overcome the fixed costs of introducing more women into the labor market. However, for this approach to work, there needs to be complementary policies that tackle the barriers that hinder women in their pursuit of long-term participation in the labor force and better-paid occupations. A hope is to shift the paradigm of how we think of women’s participation in the labor force by demonstrating the importance of the distinction between jobs and careers. Although aspirations towards careers are achieved in different ways, understanding how progress is being made in each country towards a more equitable life between men and women will pave the way for a better route forward.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Short and Long-Run Labor Market Effects of Developing Country Exports : Evidence from Bangladesh
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Robertson, Raymond, Kokas, Deeksha, Cardozo, Diego, and Lopez-Acevedo, Gladys
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LABOR MARKET ,Bangladesh ,EXPORT SHOCK ,F14 ,F15 ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,F16 ,J23 ,local labor markets ,O19 ,MULTI-FIBER ARRANGEMENT ,INFORMALITY ,O15 ,TRADE SHOCK ,MULTI-FIBRE ARRANGEMENT ,GARMENT INDUSTRY ,apparel ,WAGE INEQUALITY ,ddc:330 ,F13 ,J31 ,MFA ,STOLPER-SAMUELSON ,exports - Abstract
This paper studies how a positive export shock -- the sharp increase in garment-sector exports that began at the end of the Multifibre Arrangement (MFA) -- spread through Bangladesh's labor markets. Although the end of the MFA was arguably exogenous to Bangladesh, the authors instrument export demand with OECD imports to ensure identification. The paper compares estimates of the local labor market effects (wages and informality) and estimates from wage equations that reflect the predictions from long-run, general-equilibrium neoclassical trade theory. As in other studies, this paper finds that the export shock was localized both in terms of sector and geography. Wages increased and informality decreased in sub-districts more exposed to the export shock. Unlike in other studies, these local labor market effects dissipate quickly. Furthermore, Bangladesh's export shock was sector specific, limited predominantly to the female-intensive garment and textile sector. The paper shows that, following the increase in exports of the female-intensive good, the male-female wage gap closes considerably throughout the country -- not just in the apparel sector. In relatively small Bangladesh, the national labor market seems to be more integrated compared to larger countries studied, possibly suggesting that labor adjustment costs are lower in smaller countries.
- Published
- 2020
10. The US anomaly: How do re-exports affect the US apparel industry?
- Author
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Husband, Laura
- Subjects
CLOTHING industry - Published
- 2021
11. New duty refund scheme for India's apparel exporters.
- Author
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Husband, Laura
- Subjects
CLOTHING industry ,REBATES - Published
- 2021
12. SACU in Global Value Chains : Measuring GVC Integration, Position, and Performance of Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa, and Swaziland
- Author
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Engel, Jakob, Winkler, Deborah, and Farole, Thomas
- Subjects
INVESTMENT ,APPAREL SECTOR ,FOREIGN INVESTORS ,INFRASTRUCTURE ,PATTERNS OF TRADE ,INTERMEDIATE INPUTS ,VALUE ADDED ,GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT ,WORLD TRADE ,CROSSING ,COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS ,TARIFF BARRIERS ,MEASUREMENT ,TERMS OF TRADE ,DRIVERS ,EMISSIONS ,LAGS ,INVESTMENTS ,OUTCOMES ,VEHICLE ,EXPORT GROWTH ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,TRADE OPENNESS ,COMPETITIVENESS ,TRADE PERFORMANCE ,CARRIERS ,INCENTIVES ,ECONOMIC COMPETITIVENESS ,IMPACT OF TRADE ,EXOGENOUS SHOCKS ,TRADE AGREEMENTS ,GOODS ,INPUT- OUTPUT TABLES ,TRADE DATA ,FINAL GOODS ,ACCESS ,REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS ,TRADE POLICY ,MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS ,WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION ,TRANSPARENCY ,ECONOMIC OUTLOOK ,INDUSTRIAL POLICIES ,TARIFF ,COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE ,BILATERAL TRADE DATA ,SUBSIDIES ,CURRENCY APPRECIATION ,MARKETS ,INTERMEDIATE GOODS ,EXPORTERS ,DEVELOPMENT ,WAGES ,OPEN ECONOMY ,GROSS OUTPUT ,FARES ,OPTIMIZATION ,NATIONAL INCOME ,WELFARE ,SURPLUS LABOR ,PRODUCTION ,APPAREL ,TRADE FLOW DATA ,TRAINS ,OPENNESS ,TRADE INTEGRATION ,MOTOR VEHICLES ,TOTAL OUTPUT ,ECONOMIC COOPERATION ,CONSUMPTION ,STRUCTURAL CHANGE ,GDP PER CAPITA ,THEORY ,TRENDS ,TRUE ,TRADE ,SUPPLY ,TRADE PARTNER ,TRADE POLICIES ,MOTOR VEHICLE ,AUTOMOBILE ,COSTS ,WEALTH ,AGGREGATE TRADE ,AGRICULTURE ,PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH ,CONSUMERS ,FUEL ,WTO ,GDP ,DEMAND SHOCKS ,REGIONAL TRADE ,OPEN ECONOMIES ,POLITICAL ECONOMY ,SPECIALIZATION ,GLOBAL TRADE ANALYSIS ,GROWTH POTENTIAL ,TREND ,VALUE ,EXPORTS ,GLOBAL TRADE ,INPUT-OUTPUT TABLES ,TRAILS ,METAL PRODUCTS ,POLICIES ,DRIVING ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,DOMESTIC PRODUCERS ,INVESTMENT TREATIES ,DYNAMIC ANALYSIS ,VEHICLES ,TELECOMMUNICATIONS ,TRADE VOLUMES ,CURRENCY ,TAXES ,APPAREL MANUFACTURING ,TRADE FLOWS ,PRICE FLUCTUATIONS ,BILATERAL TRADE ,GROSS EXPORTS ,TRADE MORE ,TRAINING ,FUELS ,CAPITAL GOODS ,ECONOMIC POLICY ,VERTICAL SPECIALIZATION ,DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES ,TRANSPORT SERVICES ,TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER ,GROWTH RATE ,AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY ,ECONOMIC STRUCTURE ,GLOBAL MARKETS ,TRADE COSTS ,MARKET SHARE ,TRANSPORT COSTS ,AUTOMOBILES ,TRADE PARTNERS ,LABOR MARKETS ,DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES ,EXPORT SECTORS ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ,APPAREL INDUSTRIES ,ECONOMIC SYSTEMS ,EXPORT VALUE ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ,INPUTS ,HEAVY RELIANCE ,NATURAL RESOURCES ,TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT ,ECONOMIC RESEARCH ,MANUFACTURING LABOR FORCE ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES ,PETROLEUM PRODUCTS ,AUTO INDUSTRY - Abstract
Once concentrated among a few large economies, global flows of goods, services, and capital now reach an ever larger number of economies worldwide. Global trade in goods and services increased 10 times between 1980 and 2011, while FDI flows increased almost 30-fold. The sales from foreign-owned firms amount to $26 trillion. As many as 3,000 bilateral investment treaties have been signed to create the framework of deep agreements needed not only to facilitate the global movement of final goods and services but also to internationalize entire processes of production. All these flows have grown over time, creating increasingly dense and complex networks. This note is intended provide an overview of SACU countries’ participation and performance in GVCs, drawing on several data sources and indicators, and most importantly the recently released 189-country Eora multi-region-input-output (MRIO) database (Lenzen et al. 2012, 2013). Following this introduction, the note is structured in five additional sections. Section two discusses in greater detail the scope of the report, including the data sources and methodological approaches, as well as their respective limitations. Section three looks at structural integration in trade, including the degree to which SACU countries import and export intermediates. Section four analyzes trends in value-added exports as a first step in exploring GVC participation. Section five hones in on the core measures of GVC participation and a brief analysis of SACU countries’ position in GVCs. Finally, section six concludes by bringing together the main findings from the analysis.
- Published
- 2016
13. Inland Transportation and Lead Time of Apparel Exports
- Author
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Gupta, Anupama, Dasgupta, Pinaki, and Mishra, Mridula S.
- Subjects
Road Transportation ,ddc:650 ,Apparel Exports ,Delivery Lead Time ,Rail Transportation - Abstract
The purpose of this research was to study the relationship of severity levels of road and rail transportation activities and related issues and challenges in terms of their effect on delivery lead time of Indian apparel exports. The research was conducted in India and 157 managers handling ocean freight operations of apparel export shipments participated. It was found that lack of professionalism/skill levels of truck drivers and bad quality/condition of roads are the two most significant logistics challenges in road transportation that affect delivery lead of Indian apparel exports. The next significant issues and challenges explaining the severity level of road transportation were found as delay involved in interstate regulatory check points and inefficient /older technology inbuilt in trucks /trailers. Lack of planning and coordination in cargo rail services and lack of frequency of container rail services due to evacuation constraints were identified as two most significant logistics challenges in rail transportation that affect delivery lead of Indian apparel exports. The next significant issues and challenges explaining the severity level of rail transportation were found to as non availability of rakes/wagons and less number of dedicated tracks for container rail.
- Published
- 2015
14. The Labor Content of Exports in South Africa and Botswana : A Preliminary Exploration
- Author
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Calì, Massimiliano and Hollweg, Claire
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ,VALUE ADDED ,EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS ,GDP ,LABOR VALUE ,EMPLOYMENT ,MULTIPLIERS ,ACCOUNTING ,INCOME DISTRIBUTION ,GLOBAL TRADE ANALYSIS ,LAGS ,CROSS-SECTORAL VARIATION ,VALUE ,TREND ,INCOME ,EXPORTS ,VEHICLE ,GLOBAL TRADE ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,UNSKILLED LABOR ,INPUT-OUTPUT TABLES ,OUTPUTS ,METAL PRODUCTS ,WORKERS ,LABOR SHARE ,COMPETITIVENESS ,JOBS ,SUPPLIERS ,VEHICLES ,GOODS ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODELING ,EMPLOYEES ,FINAL GOODS ,EXPORT SHARE ,SKILLED WORKERS ,ORGANIZATIONS ,GROSS EXPORTS ,GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT ,MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES ,TOTAL EMPLOYMENT ,TRANSPORT SERVICES ,SKILLED LABOR ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS ,EXPORTERS ,LABOR INTENSITY ,WAGES ,PRIVATE SERVICES ,UNSKILLED WORKERS ,GROSS OUTPUT ,NATIONAL INCOME ,LABOR ,EXPORT SECTORS ,PRODUCTION ,APPAREL ,MOTOR VEHICLES ,TOTAL OUTPUT ,GDP PER CAPITA ,INPUTS ,TRANSPORT ,TRADE ,DOMESTIC SUPPLIERS ,VALUE OF OUTPUT ,SUPPLY ,MOTOR VEHICLE ,TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT ,MOTOR VEHICLE EXPORTS - Abstract
The LACEX dataset has been recently assembled to compute the (direct and indirect) value of the compensation of employees linked to exports for each sector/country/year. The data has been computed on the basis of a panel of global input-output data spanning intermittent years from 1995 to 2007 from the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP). This represents a form of social accounting data - a variation on the social accounting matrix (SAM) where incomes are shown in the rows of the SAM while expenditures are shown in the columns. The structure of the data provides a comprehensive and consistent record of national income accounting relationships between different sectors and regions, including intermediate and final demand linkages. This structure of the dataset allows one to obtain the value added content of final output and exports, including its compensation of employees’ component. That includes both the direct and indirect compensation, based on the backward linkages of each sector with the rest of the economy. In order to obtain these labor value added measures, two intermediate multiplier matrixes need to be calculated. The first is the Leontief inverse matrix, which measures the inputs contained in a unit of final output. This matrix contains both direct and indirect inputs. Next, one needs to calculate a matrix which has the compensation of employees’ shares of total output. Using these two matrixes as multipliers one can obtain the compensation of employees’ shares of exports and final outputs. These shares are also split between skilled and unskilled workers.
- Published
- 2015
15. Price Effects of Preferential Market Access: Caribbean Basin Initiative and the Apparel Sector
- Author
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Caglar Ozden and Gunjan Sharma
- Subjects
BORDER PRICE ,PRICE LEVELS ,CUSTOMS ,MARKET ACCESS ,PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS ,MARKET POWER ,APPAREL SECTOR ,PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT ,Market access ,EXPORT VOLUME ,FREE MARKET ,INVENTORY ,VALUE ADDED ,ECONOMIC GROWTH ,EXCHANGE RATES ,MOST FAVORED NATION ,DOMESTIC PRICE ,PRICE EFFECT ,PREFERENTIAL TRADE ARRANGEMENTS ,TRANSACTION COSTS ,Economics ,RETAILING ,IMPORT PRICE ,Free trade ,INCOME ,TRADE NEGOTIATIONS ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,IMPACT OF TRADE POLICIES ,TARIFF RATE ,PRODUCTION COSTS ,IMPACT OF TRADE ,WORLD TRADING SYSTEM ,ECONOMIC RECOVERY ,IMPORT DATA ,PRICE INCREASES ,FREE MARKET ACCESS ,GEOGRAPHIC PROXIMITY ,DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS ,WORLD MARKETS ,Development ,Relative price ,APPAREL MARKET ,EXPORT PRICES ,Trade agreement ,EXPORTERS ,ZERO TARIFFS ,PREFERENTIAL TARIFF ,WAGES ,EXPORT PROCESSING ,APPAREL ,TARIFF REDUCTION ,Caribbean Basin Initiative ,TRADE AGREEMENT ,LOWER PRICES ,International economics ,PRICE INCREASE ,PRICE INDEX ,RELATIVE PRICES ,EXPORT PRICE ,POLICY IMPLICATIONS ,PREFERENTIAL ARRANGEMENTS ,PRICE OF IMPORTS ,TRADE POLICIES ,AVERAGE PRICE ,FREE TRADE AGREEMENT ,TRADE ¸ POLICIES ,PREFERENTIAL TARIFFS ,AGRICULTURE ,GENERALIZED SYSTEM OF PREFERENCES ,PRICE CHANGE ,UNILATERAL PREFERENCES ,FREE TRADE ,CONSUMERS ,TRADING PARTNERS ,VOLUNTARY EXPORT RESTRAINTS ,Regional integration ,TRADE PARTNERSHIP ,SPECIALIZATION ,INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS ,Commercial policy ,EXPORTS ,POSITIVE EFFECTS ,REGIONALISM ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,RECIPROCITY ,HIGH TRADE BARRIERS ,REGIONAL INTEGRATION ,TARIFF CHANGES ,EXCHANGE RATE ,INSURANCE ,SUPPLY CHAIN ,PREFERENTIAL ACCESS ,RULES OF ORIGIN ,TRADE COMMISSION ,CUSTOMS VALUE ,TRADE FLOWS ,FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS ,VALUE OF IMPORTS ,Economics and Econometrics ,VALUE OF TRADE ,TARIFF PREFERENCES ,EXPORT VOLUMES ,DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ,COMPETITIVE MARKET ,MARKET SHARE ,TRANSPORT COSTS ,Accounting ,IMPORT PRICES ,APPAREL PREFERENCES ,EXPORT PROCESSING ZONES ,FREE TREATMENT ,Market power ,PREFERENTIAL TRADE ,DOMESTIC PRICE INDEX ,DOMESTIC SOURCES ,APPAREL QUOTAS ,IMPERFECT COMPETITION ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ,EXPORT VALUE ,RELATIVE PRICE ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION ,CLIMATE ,EXPORT PERFORMANCE ,VER ,Finance - Abstract
Preferential trade arrangements should be evaluated by their effect on prices rather than by their effect on the total value of trade. This point is emphasized in the theoretical literature but rarely implemented empirically. This article analyzes the U.S. Caribbean Basin Initiative's (CBI's) impact on the prices received by eligible apparel exporters. The CBI's apparel preferences are the most important and heavily used unilateral preferences because of high trade barriers imposed on exports from the rest of the world. A fixed effect generalized least squares (GLS) estimation is used to isolate the effects of other factors (such as quality, exchange rates, and transaction costs) and to identify the effects of tariff preferences. CBI exporters capture only about two-thirds of their preference margin despite the high degree of competition among importers. This translates into a 9 percent increase in the relative prices they receive, with some variance across countries and years. Countries specializing in higher value items capture more of the preference margin, and the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has a negative effect. Removing multifibre arrangement quotas significantly lowers the benefits of CBI preferences.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Tight Clothing: How the MFA Affects Asian Apparel Exports
- Author
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Evans, Carolyn L., author and Harrigan, James, author
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Unlocking Central America's Export Potential : Infrastructure for Unlocking Exports - SEZs, Innovation, and Quality Systems
- Author
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World Bank
- Subjects
FOREIGN TRADE ,CUSTOMS ,EXPORT SUBSIDIES ,MARKET ACCESS ,PRODUCERS ,CUSTOMS PROCEDURES ,DOMESTIC PRODUCTION ,NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ,TAX EXEMPTIONS ,APPAREL SECTOR ,CUSTOMS UNION ,FOREIGN INVESTORS ,INTERMEDIATE INPUTS ,VALUE ADDED ,ECONOMIC GROWTH ,TRADE PROMOTION ,WORLD TRADE ,EXPORT SECTOR ,SPECIAL INCENTIVES ,MUTUAL RECOGNITION AGREEMENT ,COMMODITY ,FREE ZONES ,EXPORT PERFORMANCE REQUIREMENTS ,MUTUAL RECOGNITION ARRANGEMENT ,DOMESTIC MARKET ,EXPORT PROCESSING ZONE ,VERTICAL INTEGRATION ,CUSTOMS TERRITORY ,INCOME ,TOURISM ,INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,FEASIBILITY STUDIES ,ECONOMIC CRISIS ,GENERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS ,COMPETITIVENESS ,CROWDING OUT ,REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT ,TRADE FACILITATION ,TRADE PREFERENCES ,DOMESTIC ECONOMY ,INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION ,TRADE PROMOTION AGENCY ,CUSTOMS REGIME ,COMMON MARKET ,INCENTIVE STRUCTURE ,POLICY DECISIONS ,BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ,METALS ,LABOR COSTS ,REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS ,TRADE POLICY ,OUTSOURCING ,WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION ,SKILLED WORKERS ,COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE ,IMPORT DUTIES ,DUTY DRAWBACK ,FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT ,INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES ,INTERMEDIATE GOODS ,EXPORTERS ,REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS ,TAX REVENUE ,WAGES ,SHOPS ,TRADE BARRIERS ,APPAREL EXPORT ,DOMESTIC MARKETS ,INDIVIDUAL FIRMS ,SPECIAL REGIMES ,EXPORT PROCESSING ,COMPETITIVE POSITION ,APPAREL ,MUTUAL RECOGNITION ,TRADE AGREEMENT ,INFORMATION SYSTEM ,GDP PER CAPITA ,BARRIER ,ENVIRONMENTAL ,COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES ,BORDER TRADE ,FREE TRADE AREAS ,EXPORT INCENTIVES ,CORPORATE TAX ,CUSTOMS ADMINISTRATION ,FREE ZONE ,APPAREL ACCOUNTS ,FINANCIAL SERVICES ,FREE TRADE AGREEMENT ,GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS ,UNFAIR COMPETITION ,CENTRAL BANK ,EPZ ,AGRICULTURE ,FREE ACCESS ,FREE TRADE ,INVESTMENT CLIMATE ,ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ,ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ,FOREIGN FIRM ,WTO ,GDP ,POLICY ENVIRONMENT ,HARMONIZATION ,FOREIGN EXCHANGE ,FREE TRADE ZONE ,REGIONAL TRADE ,BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT ,INVESTMENT POLICY ,TRADE PARTNERSHIP ,FOREIGN SUPPLIERS ,SPECIALIZATION ,EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION ,INCOME TAX ,FREE ENTRY ,EXPORTS ,FOREIGN MARKETS ,INCOME TAX EXEMPTION ,MARKET SIZE ,TRADE POLICY ENVIRONMENT ,INDUSTRIAL POLICY ,BENCHMARK ,FUTURE GROWTH ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,SUSTAINABLE GROWTH ,REGULATORY FRAMEWORK ,STAMP DUTIES ,DOMESTIC PRODUCERS ,ECONOMIC IMPACT ,FREE TRADE ZONES ,OUTPUT ,REGIONAL INTEGRATION ,CURRENCY ,RULES OF ORIGIN ,EXPORT BASKET ,APPAREL MANUFACTURING ,BOND ,EXPORT SHARE ,FREE IMPORTS ,INTERNATIONAL INVESTORS ,DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES ,ECONOMISTS ,TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER ,EXPORT VOLUMES ,REINVESTMENT ,GROWTH RATE ,JOINT VENTURES ,DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ,ECONOMIC STRUCTURE ,INVESTOR DEMANDS ,TRADE COSTS ,TRANSPORT COSTS ,EXPORT PROCESSING ZONES ,PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT ,GLOBALIZATION ,AGREEMENT ON SUBSIDIES ,REAL ESTATE ,BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ,EXPORT SECTORS ,FOREIGN INVESTMENT ,ECONOMICS ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ,FOREIGN FIRMS ,SMALL COUNTRIES ,JOB CREATION ,MARKET STANDARDS ,COMMODITY EXPORT ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ,EXPORT VALUE ,TRADE DIVERSION ,NATURAL RESOURCES ,LABOR FORCE ,FINANCIAL SUPPORT ,DOMESTIC SUPPLIERS ,KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS ,FOREIGN COMPANIES ,FREE ACCESS TO IMPORTS ,FOREIGN TRADE PROMOTION ,FOREIGN CURRENCY ,LOCAL CURRENCY ,TRADE COMPETITIVENESS ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES ,EXPORT PERFORMANCE ,FISHERIES ,EXPORT TAXES - Abstract
The Central America region is a small market. The region contains around 43 million inhabitants (0.6 percent of total world population) who generate around 0.25 percent of the world's Gross Domestic Product (GDP). While the region has successfully embarked on a regional integration agenda and has strong commercial links with the US, extra-regional trade-mainly with large fast-growing emerging economies-remains a challenge. Export performance is analyzed along three dimensions that, together, give a fairly comprehensive picture of competitiveness: 1) the composition, orientation and growth of the export basket; 2) the degree of export diversification across products and markets; and 3) the level of sophistication and quality of their main exports. This analysis allows exports dynamics at the different margins of trade (intensive, extensive, and quality) to be evaluated and individual countries' to be benchmarked with peers in the Central American region. The results of this report allow policy makers to identify key areas to explore in the overall discussion of export competitiveness in the Central American region. This paper relates to the literature on challenges and opportunities that trade liberalization can bring to the Central American region. Much of the recent literature focuses on the role of the free trade agreement negotiated by Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, with the US.
- Published
- 2012
18. Unlocking Central America's Export Potential : Export Performance
- Author
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World Bank
- Subjects
BILATERAL RELATIONSHIPS ,FOREIGN TRADE ,TRADE LIBERALIZATION ,CUSTOMS ,EXPORT PATTERNS ,MARKET ACCESS ,PRELIMINARY ASSESSMENT ,PROTECTIONIST MEASURES ,PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS ,GLOBAL MARKET ,APPAREL SECTOR ,PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT ,VALUE ADDED ,WORLD TRADE ,EXPORT SECTOR ,GLOBAL COMPETITION ,EXCHANGE RATES ,TRUST FUND ,FREE ZONES ,TERMS OF TRADE ,TRADE CENTER ,EXPORT MARKETS ,DOMESTIC MARKET ,TECHNICAL BARRIERS ,MISSING MARKETS ,CUSTOMS TERRITORY ,INCOME ,INPUT PRICES ,CAPACITY OF FIRMS ,EXPORT GROWTH ,INSTRUMENT ,FINISHED PRODUCTS ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,TRADE PATTERNS ,TRADE OPENNESS ,ECONOMIC CRISIS ,FINANCIAL CRISIS ,COMPETITIVENESS ,TRADE FACILITATION ,TRADE PERFORMANCE ,PER CAPITA INCOME ,COMMON MARKET ,TRADE DEFICITS ,EXPORT SHARES ,TARIFF REDUCTIONS ,TRADE DATA ,TREATY ,REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS ,IMPORT DATA ,NEGATIVE SHOCKS ,OUTSOURCING ,WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION ,EMERGING MARKETS ,MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS ,WELFARE GAINS ,EMERGING ECONOMIES ,EXPORT MARKET ,FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT ,MARGINAL COSTS ,ECONOMIC SECTORS ,INTERMEDIATE GOODS ,REMITTANCE ,INTRAREGIONAL TRADE ,EXPORTERS ,INTERNATIONAL MARKETS ,TRADE DEFICIT ,GLOBAL ECONOMY ,PREFERENTIAL RULES ,NET EXPORTS ,APPAREL ,EXPORTER ,LABOR MARKET ,TARIFF REDUCTION ,OPENNESS ,TRADE AGREEMENT ,INFORMATION SYSTEM ,TRADE INTEGRATION ,SUPPLIER ,GDP PER CAPITA ,APPAREL INDUSTRY ,TRADE SURPLUS ,INCOME LEVELS ,IMPORT LICENSING ,FREE ZONE ,MARKET DIVERSIFICATION ,TRADE PARTNER ,PROTECTIONIST ,BARRIERS TO TRADE ,FREE TRADE AGREEMENT ,PREFERENTIAL TARIFFS ,ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ,EXPORT BASKETS ,LOCAL MARKET ,PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS ,FREE ACCESS ,FREE TRADE ,PRICE CONTROLS ,CONSUMERS ,GRAVITY MODEL ,ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ,INVESTMENT PROJECTS ,WTO ,GDP ,TARIFF PREFERENCE LEVEL ,FREE TRADE ZONE ,TRADE BALANCE ,REGIONAL TRADE ,EXTERNAL TARIFFS ,FOREIGN SUPPLIERS ,IMPORT SHARE ,SPECIALIZATION ,EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION ,EXPORTS ,FOREIGN MARKETS ,INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTION ,TRADE RELATIONSHIP ,REMITTANCES ,BENCHMARK ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,BENCHMARKS ,DOMESTIC PRODUCERS ,HOST COUNTRY ,REGIONAL INTEGRATION ,HUMAN CAPITAL ,EQUIPMENT ,INSURANCE ,QUOTA SYSTEM ,SUPPLY CHAIN ,TURNOVER ,EXPORT BASKET ,TRADE FLOWS ,FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS ,INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ,EXPORT SHARE ,BILATERAL TRADE ,AVERAGE TARIFF ,GROSS EXPORTS ,TRADE MORE ,MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES ,DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES ,EXPORT ORIENTATION ,EXPORT VOLUMES ,IMPORTS ,GROWTH RATE ,DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ,FOREIGN MARKET ,LOW TARIFFS ,MARKET INFORMATION ,TRADE BALANCES ,MARKET SHARE ,TRADE COSTS ,MARKET FAILURES ,PREFERENTIAL TRADE ,GLOBALIZATION ,SALES ,EXPORT SECTORS ,FOREIGN INVESTMENT ,INVESTMENT BANK ,TRADE-RELATED INVESTMENT ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ,EXPORT CAPACITY ,TRADE RESTRICTIONS ,FOREIGN FIRMS ,TRADING ,STATISTICAL ANALYSIS ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ,EXPORT VALUE ,LOCAL ECONOMY ,FINANCIAL SUPPORT ,LOCAL BUSINESS ,TRADE RELATIONSHIPS ,DOMESTIC SUPPLIERS ,KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS ,AGGREGATE EXPORTS ,MARKET SHARES ,EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS ,BENCHMARKING ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES ,EXPORT PERFORMANCE ,VOLATILITY - Abstract
The Central America region is a small market. The region contains around 43 million inhabitants (0.6 percent of total world population) who generate around 0.25 percent of the world's Gross Domestic Product (GDP). While the region has successfully embarked on a regional integration agenda and has strong commercial links with the US, extra-regional trade-mainly with large fast-growing emerging economies-remains a challenge. Export performance is analyzed along three dimensions that, together, give a fairly comprehensive picture of competitiveness: 1) the composition, orientation and growth of the export basket; 2) the degree of export diversification across products and markets; and 3) the level of sophistication and quality of their main exports. This analysis allows exports dynamics at the different margins of trade (intensive, extensive, and quality) to be evaluated and individual countries' to be benchmarked with peers in the Central American region. The results of this report allow policy makers to identify key areas to explore in the overall discussion of export competitiveness in the Central American region. This paper relates to the literature on challenges and opportunities that trade liberalization can bring to the Central American region. Much of the recent literature focuses on the role of the free trade agreement negotiated by Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, with the US.
- Published
- 2012
19. ANÁLISIS DEL PROCESO EXPORTADOR DE EMPRESAS DEL SECTOR CONFECCIONES DE SANTANDER A ESTADOS UNIDOS
- Author
-
Edgar Javier Gómez Parada and Gustavo González Sarmiento
- Subjects
General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Exportación de confecciones ,proceso exportador ,exportaciones santandereanas ,Apparel exports ,export process ,Santander exports ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Se examina el proceso exportador de los empresarios de confecciones de Santander a Estados Unidos basado en el modelo de internacionalización gradualista (Escuela de Uppsala). El mercado de Estados Unidos es bastante atractivo para los exportadores de confecciones, por el tamaño de las importaciones (83 mil millones de dólares en el 2008) y el crecimiento de las mismas (29,6% entre el 2002 – 2008). La amplia participación de competidores y la evidente dominancia de China y otros países asiáticos, hace cada vez más fuerte la competencia por el mercado. Los exportadores santandereanos tienen alta permanencia en el mercado y realizan las operaciones de comercio exterior de manera directa, por lo que se ubican en la fase intermedia del proceso de internacionalización.
- Published
- 2010
20. Análisis del proceso exportador de empresas del sector confecciones de santander a estados unidos
- Author
-
Gómez Parada, Édgar Javier, González Sarmiento, Gustavo, Gómez Parada, Édgar Javier, and González Sarmiento, Gustavo
- Abstract
Se examina el proceso exportador de los empresarios de confecciones de Santander a Estados Unidos basado en el modelo de internacionalización gradualista (Escuela de Uppsala). El mercado de Estados Unidos es bastante atractivo para los exportadores de confecciones, por el tamaño de las importaciones (83 mil millones de dólares en el 2008) y el crecimiento de las mismas (29,6% entre el 2002 – 2008). La amplia participación de competidores y la evidente dominancia de China y otros países asiáticos, hace cada vez más fuerte la competencia por el mercado. Los exportadores santandereanos tienen alta permanencia en el mercado y realizan las operaciones de comercio exterior de manera directa, por lo que se ubican en la fase intermedia del proceso de internacionalización.
- Published
- 2010
21. Market access and welfare under free trade agreements: textiles under NAFTA
- Author
-
Alberto Portugal-Perez, Jaime de Melo, Olivier Cadot, Céline Carrère, Centre d'Études et de Recherches sur le Développement International (CERDI), Université d'Auvergne - Clermont-Ferrand I (UdA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Carcenac, Agnès
- Subjects
BORDER PRICE ,CUSTOMS ,EXPORT SUBSIDIES ,PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS ,CUSTOMS PROCEDURES ,MARKET POWER ,APPAREL SECTOR ,Market access ,DEVELOPING COUNTRY ,VALUE ADDED ,WORLD TRADE ,Trade agreement ,SOURCING ,EXCHANGE RATES ,MOST FAVORED NATION ,ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION ,TARIFF LINE ,PREFERENTIAL TRADE ARRANGEMENTS ,ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY ,Economics ,CONSUMER PRICES ,SUBSTITUTE ,050207 economics ,Free trade ,INPUT PRICES ,FINISHED PRODUCTS ,PERFECT COMPETITION ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,QUOTAS ,SALE ,TRADE PERFORMANCE ,TRADE PREFERENCES ,CONSTANT ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION ,Tariff preferences ,PRODUCTION COSTS ,WORLD TRADING SYSTEM ,PRODUCER PRICES ,TARIFF REDUCTIONS ,TRADE DATA ,TREATY ,REGIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS ,TEXTILE IMPORTS ,WELFARE GAINS ,CONSTANT ELASTICITY OF TRANSFORMATION ,Development ,INCOME EFFECTS ,SAFEGUARD CLAUSE ,EXPORT PRICES ,Final goods ,EXPORTERS ,0502 economics and business ,COMPETITION FRAMEWORK ,DEMAND CURVE ,FOREIGN GOODS ,SUPPLY ELASTICITY ,PREFERENTIAL RULES ,RATE OF TARIFF PREFERENCE ,TARIFF REDUCTION ,UNIT OF APPAREL ,International economics ,APPAREL INDUSTRY ,COMPLIANCE COSTS ,PRICE INCREASE ,PRODUCER PRICE ,CONSUMER PRICE ,DEVELOPMENT POLICY ,FUNCTIONAL FORMS ,FREE TRADE AREAS ,TARIFF DATA ,PREFERENTIAL AGREEMENTS ,EQUILIBRIUM ,DOMESTIC SALES ,PROTECTIONIST ,AVERAGE PRICE ,FREE TRADE AGREEMENT ,MULTILATERAL TRADE ,PREFERENTIAL TARIFFS ,PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS ,Rules of origin ,Apparel products ,DEVELOPED COUNTRIES ,PREFERENTIAL RULES OF ORIGIN ,PROTECTIONIST DEVICES ,TARIFF LINES ,CONSUMERS ,PRICE ELASTICITY ,NAFTA ,rules of origin ,regional integration ,BRAND ,ECONOMETRIC ESTIMATES ,International trade ,APPAREL PRODUCERS ,SURPLUS ,PREFERENTIAL RATES ,PREFERENTIAL REGIME ,Free trade agreements ,EXPORT SALES ,TARIFF CLASSIFICATION ,Regional integration ,MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION ,FOREIGN PRODUCER ,REGIONAL TRADE ,REGIONAL VALUE CONTENT ,POLITICAL ECONOMY ,ACCOUNTING ,SPECIALIZATION ,INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS ,050502 law ,Commercial policy ,EXPORTS ,05 social sciences ,INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ,QUANTITATIVE RESTRICTIONS ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,MULTILATERAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION ,SUPPLIERS ,REGIONAL INTEGRATION ,TARIFF CHANGES ,EXCHANGE RATE ,OPPORTUNITY COSTS ,PREFERENTIAL ACCESS ,SPREAD ,TRADE FLOWS ,TREASURY ,Economics and Econometrics ,DOMESTIC DEMAND ,Intermediate goods ,AVERAGE TARIFF ,APPAREL GOODS ,APPAREL TARIFF ,DUMMY VARIABLES ,ECONOMIC POLICY ,PRICE MARGIN ,GOVERNMENT REVENUE ,COMMERCE ,TRADE CLASSIFICATION ,URUGUAY ROUND ,BRANDS ,TARIFF REVENUE ,Apparel ,Supply and demand ,DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ,INTERNATIONAL BANK ,BILATERAL CUMULATION ,Accounting ,BENEFITS OF TRADE ,PRICE COMPETITION ,ddc:330 ,Market power ,PREFERENTIAL TRADE ,SALES ,0505 law ,SIMULATION TECHNIQUES ,SUPPLY CURVE ,business.industry ,ELASTICITY OF DEMAND ,MULTILATERAL TRADE ~ LIBERALIZATION ,TRADING ,IMPERFECT COMPETITION ,PREFERENTIAL MARGINS ,PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION ,STATISTICAL ANALYSIS ,BUDGETING ,PERFECT SUBSTITUTES ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION ,ECONOMIES OF SCALE ,IMPORT VALUES ,TRADE EXPANSION ,CUSTOMS OFFICIALS ,ddc:320 ,CAPTIVE MARKET ,ECONOMIC RESEARCH ,TARIFF RATES ,business ,Finance ,MARGINAL UTILITY - Abstract
The effective market access granted to textiles and apparel under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is estimated, taking into account the presence of rules of origin. First, estimates are provided of the effect of tariff preferences combined with rules of origin on the border prices of Mexican final goods exported to the United States (U.S.) and of U.S. intermediate goods exported to Mexico, based on eight-digit harmonized system tariff-line data. A third of the estimated rise in the border price of Mexican apparel products is found to compensate for the cost of complying with NAFTA's rules of origin, and NAFTA is found to have raised the price of U.S. intermediate goods exported to Mexico by around 12 percent, with downstream rules of origin accounting for a third of that increase. Second, simulations are used to estimate welfare gains for Mexican exporters from preferential market access under NAFTA. The presence of rules of origin is found to approximately halve these gains.
- Published
- 2005
22. The Earnings Effects of Multilateral Trade Liberalization : Implications for Poverty
- Author
-
Paul V. Preckel, Maros Ivanic, John Cranfield, and Thomas W. Hertel
- Subjects
TRADE LIBERALIZATION ,MARKET ACCESS ,REAL INCOME ,TAX ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ,DEVELOPING COUNTRY ,DURABLE GOODS ,WORLD TRADE ,FOOD PRICE ,HOUSEHOLD INCOMES ,COMMODITIES ,CONSUMER GOOD ,COMMODITY ,Economics ,CONSUMER PRICES ,EMPLOYMENT ,Free trade ,INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT ,CONSUMER DEMAND ,MACROECONOMICS ,PERFECT COMPETITION ,APPAREL EXPORTS ,FACTOR ENDOWMENTS ,INVESTING ,ECONOMIC CRISIS ,FACTOR PRICE ,Per capita income ,FOOD PRICES ,CONSUMER DEMANDS ,RETURNS ,IMPORT TARIFFS ,IMPACT OF TRADE LIBERALIZATION ,PER CAPITA INCOME ,EXOGENOUS SHOCKS ,IMPACT OF TRADE ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODELING ,AGRICULTURAL TRADE ,TRADE POLICY ,MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS ,DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME ,WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION ,FAMILY LABOR ,PRICE INCREASES ,CAPITAL RETURN ,Development ,DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS ,CONSTANT SHARE ,PROTECTION ESTIMATES ,LAND HOLDINGS ,WAGES ,AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES ,GLOBAL ECONOMY ,PURCHASING POWER ,TRADE BARRIERS ,Trade barrier ,NATIONAL INCOME ,WORLD PRICES ,APPAREL ,LABOR MARKET ,AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES ,PRICE DECLINES ,INCOME INEQUALITY ,DEVELOPING ECONOMY ,ELASTICITY ,APPAREL PRODUCTS ,International economics ,GDP PER CAPITA ,INCOME LEVELS ,TARIFF DATA ,WELFARE IMPACTS ,CONSUMER SPENDING ,DURABLE ,MARKET WAGES ,PRICE CHANGES ,TRADE POLICIES ,COMMODITY PRICE ,PER CAPITA INCOMES ,MULTILATERAL TRADE ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ¨ ANALYSIS ,AGRICULTURE ,CONSUMERS ,TRADE MODELS ,DEVELOPING ECONOMIES ,LANDLESS LABORERS ,AGRICULTURAL EXPORT SUBSIDIES ,AGRICULTURAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION ,WTO ,GDP ,Economic inequality ,UTILITY FUNCTION ,WAGE RATES ,CAPITAL INTENSITY ,TRADING SYSTEM ,TRADE REFORM ,BUDGET CONSTRAINT ,SPECIALIZATION ,FACTOR MARKETS ,GLOBAL TRADE ANALYSIS ,INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS ,Commercial policy ,EXPORTS ,GLOBAL TRADE ,Liberalization ,QUOTA RENTS ,CHILD LABOR ,UNSKILLED LABOR ,GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL ,BENCHMARK ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,CAPITAL STOCK ,MULTILATERAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION ,OUTPUT ,HUMAN CAPITAL ,INCOME EFFECT ,INSURANCE ,HOUSEHOLD BUSINESS ,CONSUMER EXPENDITURE ,BARGAINING ,Economics and Econometrics ,AVERAGE TARIFF ,MARKET PRICE ,CAPITAL GOODS ,INCOME LEVEL ,BORROWING ,ECONOMIC POLICY ,HOUSEHOLD INCOME ,GOVERNMENT SPENDING ,TARIFF REVENUE ,COMMODITY PRICES ,EXPENDITURES ,TAX REVENUES ,DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ,DURABLES ,INTERNATIONAL BANK ,Accounting ,UNSKILLED WORKERS ,CONSUMER PREFERENCES ,HOUSEHOLD EARNINGS ,LABOR MARKETS ,TRANSFER PAYMENTS ,WORLD ECONOMY ,DEVELOPMENT BANK ,AVERAGE TARIFFS ,ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ,Poverty ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ,TRADING ,POWER PARITY ,CAPITAL SHARE ,PRIMARY FACTORS ,NATURAL RESOURCES ,BIDS ,PRODUCTION FUNCTION ,SAVINGS ,UNILATERAL TRADE ,COMMODITIES PRODUCER ,Basic needs ,FACTORS OF PRODUCTION ,TARIFF RATES ,INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY ,Finance ,EXPENDITURE ,EXPORT TAXES ,ELASTICITY OF TRANSFORMATION - Abstract
Most researchers examining poverty and multilateral trade liberalization have had to examine average, or per capita effects, suggesting that if per capita real income rises, poverty will fall. This inference can be misleading. Combining results from a new international cross-section consumption analysis with earnings data from household surveys, this article analyzes the implications of multilateral trade liberalization for poverty in Indonesia. It finds that the aggregate reduction in Indonesia's national poverty headcount following global trade liberalization masks a more complex set of impacts across groups. In the short run the poverty headcount rises slightly for self-employed agricultural households, as agricultural profits fail to keep up with increases in consumer prices. In the long run the poverty headcount falls for all earnings strata, as increased demand for unskilled workers lifts incomes for the formerly self-employed, some of whom move into the wage labor market. A decomposition of the poverty changes in Indonesia associated with different countries' trade policies finds that reform in other countries leads to a reduction in poverty in Indonesia but that liberalization of Indonesia's trade policies leads to an increase. The method used here can be readily extended to any of the other 13 countries in the sample.
- Published
- 2004
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