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U.S. Proposal for WTO Agriculture Negotiations: Its Impact on U.S. and World Agriculture

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Author Info
Fabiosa, Jacinto F.
Beghin, John C.
Dong, Fengxia
Elobeid, Amani
Fuller, Frank H.
Hart, Chad E.
Matthey, Holger
Tokgoz, Simla
Yu, Tun-Hsiang
FAPRI, U Missouri Columbia
Wailes, Eric

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Abstract

The Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute (FAPRI) analyzed the latest U.S. proposal to the Doha round of WTO negotiations (see Appendix 1, U.S. Proposal for WTO Agriculture Negotiations, USTR, October 10, 2005). While the U.S. proposal provides many concrete steps to reduce farm support and trade distortions, it does not provide all necessary information for quantitative analysis of the proposal. FAPRI, through consultations with economists and staffers of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, Office of the United States Trade Representative, and U.S. Department of Agriculture, elaborated a complementary set of policy assumptions to carry the quantitative analysis. The analysis is conducted in deviation from the baseline of the FAPRI 2005 U.S. and World Agricultural Outlook. New policies put in place since the 2005 baseline was established have been accommodated to separate the impact of the policy scenario from the full set of policy assumptions.

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Paper provided by Iowa State University, Department of Economics in its series Staff General Research Papers with number 12488.

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Date of creation: 15 Dec 2005
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Handle: RePEc:isu:genres:12488

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Related research
Keywords: WTO; Doha; trade reform; domestic support; market access;

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F1 - International Economics - - Trade

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  1. Mane, Ranjit & Wailes, Eric, 2006. "Impacts of trade liberalization in rice: assessing alternative proposals," 2006 Annual meeting, July 23-26, Long Beach, CA 21188, American Agricultural Economics Association (New Name 2008: Agricultural and Applied Economics Association). [Downloadable!]
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