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Trade
Liberalization and Poverty: A Handbook
The Authors:
Neil McCulloch (Institute of Development Studies) and L
Alan Winters (University of Sussex and CEPR) with Xavier
Cirera (Institute of Development Studies)
As the 142 members of the
World Trade Organization prepare to meet in Qatar next month, a major
new book shows the importance of trade liberalization for reducing
poverty in the developing world. Developing countries are likely to bear
the brunt of any world recession caused by the attacks of September 11th’,
with millions more people pushed into poverty during 2002. Ministers see
the initiation of a new round of global trade talks in Qatar as a key to
restoring flagging confidence and counteracting the downturn. They also
offer an opportunity to translate Tony Blair’s aspirations for world
community into concrete action. But if the talks are to succeed, they
must address developing countries’ needs and the trade liberalization
they bring must be seen to be helping the poor.
These arguments add
weight to calls from the advocates of openness to trade, who laud the
removal of trade barriers as the key to growth and prosperity, for rich
and poor nations alike. Others, however, argue that expanding
international trade and trade liberalization are among the causes of the
persistent and extreme poverty in developing countries. In their new
Handbook Neil McCulloch, L Alan Winters and Xavier Cirera move beyond
the rhetoric to provide an authoritative guide to how trade
liberalization and economic integration affect the poor and how they can
be used to alleviate world poverty. In this comprehensive new study,
funded by the UK’s Department of International Development, the
authors argue that:
- "International trade is almost
always good for growth and growth good for the poor, but the
effects vary from case to case. Policy and research should focus on
understanding the reliability of these links and how to make them
stronger. Gains from trade liberalization have been estimated at $US
171 billion or 0.7% World GDP. However, more gains will be accrued
from obtaining previously unavailable products."
- "Agricultural liberalization
is key for poverty reduction constituting 28% of GDP in low-income
countries and 2% in industrialized countries – but both developed
and developing countries must liberalize."
- "The liberalization of
services presents a major opportunity for growth and can help
poverty reduction if care is taken to ensure access to key services
for the poor. Current concerns about the way WTO will deal with
public services are misplaced."
- "Improved international labour
mobility has huge potential for poverty reduction, especially if
it focuses on the less skilled. We calculate this form of
liberalization could lead to gains as large as $300 billion a year.
Therefore, resolving the practical and political difficulties of
achieving this should be a priority."
- "Improved labour standards
could help the poor and international action can help to tackle poor
labour standards, but labour standards should not be linked to
trade."
- "The environmental threats
faced by the poor are overwhelmingly local – they should be
tackled by appropriate domestic environmental policy. International
environmental problems should be tackled by international
environmental agreements, not just trade sanctions. "
The authors use economic analysis and
practical experience to construct a framework for analysing the links
between trade liberalization and poverty in developing countries and
show how to implement trade liberalization in WTO-legal yet pro-poor
ways. They consider both the broad linkages between liberalization and
poverty, and specific issues that are likely to figure in future trade
talks and unilateral trade reforms; they also identify policies that
governments can implement to help to ensure that the poor gain from such
liberalization. At a time when 1.2 billion people live on less than $1 a
day, the publication of this invaluable Handbook – the first
comprehensive analysis of this topic - makes a timely and practical
contribution to the debate on trade liberalization that must occur over
the next few months.
Notes for Editors:
CEPR is a network
of over 500 Research Fellows based throughout Europe, who collaborate
through the Centre in research and its dissemination. CEPR helps it’s
Research Fellows to develop projects, obtain their funding, administer
them and disseminate their results. The Centre’s research ranges from
open economy macroeconomics to trade policy, from the economic
transformation of Central and Eastern Europe to regionalism in the world
economy.
Contact Information:
For interview requests
and further information about CEPR please contact CEPR Press Officer
Robbie Lonie, Tel: (+44 020) 7878 2919, Mobile: (+44) 07740 519225
or email rlonie@cepr.org
Trade Liberalization and Poverty: A Handbook
Funded by the UK Department for International Development and published
by CEPR 15th October 2001.
£25 for industrialized countries and £5 for developing nations
available
from:
CEPR,
90-98 Goswell Rd, London EC1V 7RR, UK
Tel (44 20) 7878 2900
Fax (44 20) 7878
2999
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The Brookings Institution, Dept. 029, Washington DC 20042-0029,
USA
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