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Groundnut trade liberalization: Could the South help the south?

John Beghin (), Ndiame Diop and Holger Matthey

ISU General Staff Papers from Iowa State University, Department of Economics

Abstract: This paper analyzes policies affecting global groundnut-products markets. The new US groundnut policy is now a minor source of distortion in world markets where India and China stand out as the major distorters. We analyze and quantify the effects of groundnut-products trade liberalization on consumer welfare and producer income. Our analysis shows that African exporters would gain significantly from reductions in protection and subsidies in India, and to a lesser extent, China, although China’s exports of food-quality groundnuts would expand dramatically. Net-importing OECD countries would suffer from higher world prices. The paper draws direct implications for the Doha trade negotiations.

Date: 2006-01-01
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Journal Article: Groundnut trade liberalization: Could the South help the south? (2006) Downloads
Working Paper: Groundnut Trade Liberalization: Could the South Help the South? (2003) Downloads
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