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Trade and Growth under Limited Liberalization: The Case of Belarus

Marina Bakanova and Lúcio Vinhas De Souza

No 331020, Conference papers from Purdue University, Center for Global Trade Analysis, Global Trade Analysis Project

Abstract: This paper studies the connection between trade and growth in the context of a partial and inconsistent liberalization process in a specific country in transition towards market economy, namely, the Republic of Belarus. The analysis of the country trade patterns during the USSR period and the years since independence revealed that unlike its close neighbors (the Baltic States and Poland) Belarus did not succeed in changing the commodity or the geographical structure of its trade. It is almost a good representation of reality to say that Belarus trades with Russia. The assessment of the rationale for the closer integration with Russia and the impact of this process on Belarus growth led us to the conclusion that the integration in the form of a non-exclusive Free Trade Area and within the framework of a wider set of international connections rather than the move towards a Customs Union (and a Union State) with Russia would be a more optimal policy for Belarus. This conclusion is supported by the results of country-specific growth regressions and of a counterfactual “free trade experiment” via a small CGE model. This paper is partially based on the work by the Authors for the World Bank Global Development Network (GDN) Project “Explaining Growth in the CIS Countries”.

Keywords: International Relations/Trade; Research Methods/Statistical Methods (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 32
Date: 2002
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