Trading Up: Trade Policy and Global Poverty
Publication Info
Publication Type
Download
Research Topics
CGD Expert
Opinions
- What to Read: Inequality and Development in a Globalizing World (Syllabus)
- Trade Talks Collapse: Who's to Blame and What Next?
- Letters to The Editor: Farm Subsidies: Necessary Evil? (Washington Post)
- Doha Prospects: Q&A with Kimberly Elliott
- Letters to The Editor: West's Farm Subsidies Cut Off Market Access for Poorer Nations' Goods (Financial Times)
Articles
- After Doha, What’s Next? Q&A with CGD’s Randall Soderquist
- The Democrats Dither on Trade (Post)
- Reviving Doha? Time for the U.S. to Lead
- Trade Talks Collapse: Who's to Blame and What Next?
- Ending Aid to Rich Farmers May Hurt the Poor Ones [NYT]
- World Bank Reconsiders Trade's Benefits to Poor [WaPo]
- Constellation of interests clouds Doha talks [FT]
Rights and Permissions
We welcome the use of CGD work-just let us know in advance! For contact information see our Rights & Permissions page. CGD rights and permissions are managed under the terms of the Creative Commons license below.
William R. Cline
09/01/2003
The trade ministers of WTO-member countries will soon meet in Cancun, Mexico, to review progress in the current round of multilateral trade negotiations (named for Doha, Qatar,where itwas launched in late 2001). There has been well-founded concern that Cancun could mark the collapse of the Doha Round, largely because industrial countries have been unprepared to grant enough liberalization in their highly protected agricultural markets to encourage developing countries to participate by liberalizing their markets for manufactures. Other contentious issues include the balance between humanitarianism and market incentive for research and development in the area of pharmaceutical patent rights. If all parties can agree to move ahead, the Doha Round holds major potential for reducing global protection and, thereby, global poverty. At the $2-per-day threshold, 2.9 billion people remain poor today—almost half the world. Used effectively, trade policy can be a major instrument for reducing this number. Global trade liberalization could substantially reduce global poverty in five important ways outlined in the box below. This policy brief is a preview of the analysis and recommendations in Trade Policy and Global Poverty, by William R. Cline.



