Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa

Evidence indicates that trade costs are a much more substantial barrier to trade than tariffs are, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. This paper decomposes trade costs into: (i) trade facilitation, (ii) non-tariff barriers, and (iii) the costs of bu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Balistreri, Edward J., Maliszewska, Maryla, Osorio-Rodarte, Israel, Tarr, David G., Yonezawa, Hidemichi
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
WTO
GDP
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/05/26345239/poverty-shared-prosperity-implications-deep-integration-eastern-southern-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24498
id okr-10986-24498
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic TARIFFS
URUGUAY ROUND
EXPORT MARKETS
MARKET STRUCTURE
MULTILATERAL TRADE
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
PRODUCTION
ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY
TRADE NEGOTIATIONS
STOCK
FOREIGN INVESTORS
INCOME
PROJECTIONS
TRADE BARRIERS
BENCHMARK EQUILIBRIUM
DISCOUNT RATE
UNILATERAL LIBERALIZATION
EXPORTS
ELASTICITY
MARGINAL PRODUCT
POLITICAL ECONOMY
PREFERENTIAL REDUCTION
WELFARE
SUPPLY CURVES
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
OPTIMIZATION
MARKET SHARES
ECONOMIC POLICY
EQUILIBRIUM
DISTRIBUTION
FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
MARKET ACCESS OPPORTUNITIES
VARIABLES
TRADE REFORMS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTORS
CAPITAL STOCK
PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS
TARIFF EQUIVALENT
REAL INCOME
INPUTS
RETURNS TO SCALE
REDUCTION OF BARRIERS
EXTERNAL TRADE
MARKET ACCESS
FREE TRADE
AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
TRADE AGREEMENTS
DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION
DEVELOPMENT
PER CAPITA INCOMES
PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS
FOREIGN TRADE
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE IN GOODS
COSTS
PER CAPITA INCOME
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
REGIONAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
CENTRAL ELASTICITIES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TRADE INTEGRATION
FOREIGN SUPPLIERS
REGULATORY BARRIERS
PRIMARY FACTORS
RENT
REGIONAL TRADE
TARIFF REDUCTION
MACROECONOMIC MODELS
TARIFF BARRIER
IMPERFECT COMPETITION
CAPITAL GOOD
MARKETS
WTO
TARIFF REDUCTIONS
OPEN ECONOMY
PREFERENTIAL TARIFF REDUCTION
ACCESS
WELFARE GAINS
PREFERENTIAL AGREEMENTS
TRADE POLICY
ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL
UTILITY
TRADE AGREEMENT
NATURAL RESOURCES
PREFERENTIAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE POLICIES
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
UNEMPLOYMENT
BORDER TRADE
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
CONSUMPTION
VALUE ADDED
UNILATERAL TRADE
CAPITAL
WAGES
TRADE PREFERENCES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
TRADE COSTS
VALUE
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
PURCHASING POWER
CONCESSIONS
TRADE REFORM
AGRICULTURE
CONSUMERS
TARIFF BARRIERS
TRADE AREA
TRADE FACILITATION
RETURN ON CAPITAL
MEASUREMENT
WAGE RATE
UNILATERAL REDUCTION
BENCHMARK
ECONOMIC THEORY
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TERMS OF TRADE
REGULATORY REGIMES
TRADE DIVERSION
TRADE DATA
REGIONAL INTEGRATION
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
TRADE
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
GDP
GOODS
THEORY
AGGREGATE TRADE
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
GLOBAL TRADE
MARKET SHARE
BILATERAL TRADE
MULTILATERAL TRADE REFORM
INVESTMENT
REGIONAL TRADE INTEGRATION
DOMESTIC PRODUCTION
CUSTOMS UNIONS
PREFERENTIAL TRADE
TERMS OF TRADE LOSS
TARIFF
FREE TRADE AREA
WORLD TRADE
UNILATERAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
UNSKILLED WORKERS
PREFERENTIAL TARIFF
BENCHMARK DATA
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
APPAREL
PRICE INDEX
AGGREGATE EXPORTS
IMPORT VALUE
UNSKILLED LABOR
PRICES
UNILATERAL REFORMS
MULTILATERAL LIBERALIZATION
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODELING
spellingShingle TARIFFS
URUGUAY ROUND
EXPORT MARKETS
MARKET STRUCTURE
MULTILATERAL TRADE
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
PRODUCTION
ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY
TRADE NEGOTIATIONS
STOCK
FOREIGN INVESTORS
INCOME
PROJECTIONS
TRADE BARRIERS
BENCHMARK EQUILIBRIUM
DISCOUNT RATE
UNILATERAL LIBERALIZATION
EXPORTS
ELASTICITY
MARGINAL PRODUCT
POLITICAL ECONOMY
PREFERENTIAL REDUCTION
WELFARE
SUPPLY CURVES
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
OPTIMIZATION
MARKET SHARES
ECONOMIC POLICY
EQUILIBRIUM
DISTRIBUTION
FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
MARKET ACCESS OPPORTUNITIES
VARIABLES
TRADE REFORMS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTORS
CAPITAL STOCK
PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS
TARIFF EQUIVALENT
REAL INCOME
INPUTS
RETURNS TO SCALE
REDUCTION OF BARRIERS
EXTERNAL TRADE
MARKET ACCESS
FREE TRADE
AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
TRADE AGREEMENTS
DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION
DEVELOPMENT
PER CAPITA INCOMES
PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS
FOREIGN TRADE
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE IN GOODS
COSTS
PER CAPITA INCOME
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
REGIONAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
CENTRAL ELASTICITIES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TRADE INTEGRATION
FOREIGN SUPPLIERS
REGULATORY BARRIERS
PRIMARY FACTORS
RENT
REGIONAL TRADE
TARIFF REDUCTION
MACROECONOMIC MODELS
TARIFF BARRIER
IMPERFECT COMPETITION
CAPITAL GOOD
MARKETS
WTO
TARIFF REDUCTIONS
OPEN ECONOMY
PREFERENTIAL TARIFF REDUCTION
ACCESS
WELFARE GAINS
PREFERENTIAL AGREEMENTS
TRADE POLICY
ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL
UTILITY
TRADE AGREEMENT
NATURAL RESOURCES
PREFERENTIAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE POLICIES
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
UNEMPLOYMENT
BORDER TRADE
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
CONSUMPTION
VALUE ADDED
UNILATERAL TRADE
CAPITAL
WAGES
TRADE PREFERENCES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
TRADE COSTS
VALUE
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
PURCHASING POWER
CONCESSIONS
TRADE REFORM
AGRICULTURE
CONSUMERS
TARIFF BARRIERS
TRADE AREA
TRADE FACILITATION
RETURN ON CAPITAL
MEASUREMENT
WAGE RATE
UNILATERAL REDUCTION
BENCHMARK
ECONOMIC THEORY
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TERMS OF TRADE
REGULATORY REGIMES
TRADE DIVERSION
TRADE DATA
REGIONAL INTEGRATION
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
TRADE
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
GDP
GOODS
THEORY
AGGREGATE TRADE
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS
GLOBAL TRADE
MARKET SHARE
BILATERAL TRADE
MULTILATERAL TRADE REFORM
INVESTMENT
REGIONAL TRADE INTEGRATION
DOMESTIC PRODUCTION
CUSTOMS UNIONS
PREFERENTIAL TRADE
TERMS OF TRADE LOSS
TARIFF
FREE TRADE AREA
WORLD TRADE
UNILATERAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION
UNSKILLED WORKERS
PREFERENTIAL TARIFF
BENCHMARK DATA
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
APPAREL
PRICE INDEX
AGGREGATE EXPORTS
IMPORT VALUE
UNSKILLED LABOR
PRICES
UNILATERAL REFORMS
MULTILATERAL LIBERALIZATION
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODELING
Balistreri, Edward J.
Maliszewska, Maryla
Osorio-Rodarte, Israel
Tarr, David G.
Yonezawa, Hidemichi
Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa
geographic_facet Africa
East Africa
Southern Africa
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7660
description Evidence indicates that trade costs are a much more substantial barrier to trade than tariffs are, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. This paper decomposes trade costs into: (i) trade facilitation, (ii) non-tariff barriers, and (iii) the costs of business services. The paper assesses the poverty and shared prosperity impacts of deep integration to reduce these three types of trade costs in: (i) the East African Customs Union–Common Market of East and Southern Africa–South African Development Community "Tripartite" Free Trade Area; (ii) within the East African Customs Union; and (iii) unilaterally by the East African Customs Union. The analysis employs an innovative, multi-region computable general equilibrium model to estimate the changes in the macroeconomic variables that impact poverty and shared prosperity. The model estimates are used in the Global Income Distribution Dynamics microsimulation model to obtain assessments of the changes in the poverty headcount and shared prosperity for each of the simulations for the six African regions or countries. The paper finds that these reforms are pro-poor. There are significant reductions in the poverty headcount and the percentage of the population living in poverty for all six of the African regions from deep integration in the Tripartite Free Trade Area or comparable unilateral reforms by the East African Customs Union. Further, the incomes of the bottom 40 percent of the populations noticeably increase in all countries or regions that are engaged in the trade reforms. The reason for the poor share in prosperity is the fact that the reforms increase unskilled wages faster than the rewards of other factors of production, as the reforms tend to favor agriculture. Despite the uniform increases in income for the poorest 40 percent, there are some cases where the share of income captured by the poorest 40 percent of the population decreases. The estimated gains vary considerably across countries and reforms. Thus, countries would have an interest in negotiating for different reforms in different agreements.
format Working Paper
author Balistreri, Edward J.
Maliszewska, Maryla
Osorio-Rodarte, Israel
Tarr, David G.
Yonezawa, Hidemichi
author_facet Balistreri, Edward J.
Maliszewska, Maryla
Osorio-Rodarte, Israel
Tarr, David G.
Yonezawa, Hidemichi
author_sort Balistreri, Edward J.
title Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_short Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_fullStr Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_sort poverty and shared prosperity implications of deep integration in eastern and southern africa
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/05/26345239/poverty-shared-prosperity-implications-deep-integration-eastern-southern-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24498
_version_ 1764456876000411648
spelling okr-10986-244982021-04-23T14:04:22Z Poverty and Shared Prosperity Implications of Deep Integration in Eastern and Southern Africa Balistreri, Edward J. Maliszewska, Maryla Osorio-Rodarte, Israel Tarr, David G. Yonezawa, Hidemichi TARIFFS URUGUAY ROUND EXPORT MARKETS MARKET STRUCTURE MULTILATERAL TRADE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION PRODUCTION ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY TRADE NEGOTIATIONS STOCK FOREIGN INVESTORS INCOME PROJECTIONS TRADE BARRIERS BENCHMARK EQUILIBRIUM DISCOUNT RATE UNILATERAL LIBERALIZATION EXPORTS ELASTICITY MARGINAL PRODUCT POLITICAL ECONOMY PREFERENTIAL REDUCTION WELFARE SUPPLY CURVES ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS OPTIMIZATION MARKET SHARES ECONOMIC POLICY EQUILIBRIUM DISTRIBUTION FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS MARKET ACCESS OPPORTUNITIES VARIABLES TRADE REFORMS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTORS CAPITAL STOCK PREFERENTIAL MARKET ACCESS TARIFF EQUIVALENT REAL INCOME INPUTS RETURNS TO SCALE REDUCTION OF BARRIERS EXTERNAL TRADE MARKET ACCESS FREE TRADE AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT TRADE AGREEMENTS DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION DEVELOPMENT PER CAPITA INCOMES PREFERENTIAL TRADE AGREEMENTS FOREIGN TRADE LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE IN GOODS COSTS PER CAPITA INCOME DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS REGIONAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION CENTRAL ELASTICITIES TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRADE INTEGRATION FOREIGN SUPPLIERS REGULATORY BARRIERS PRIMARY FACTORS RENT REGIONAL TRADE TARIFF REDUCTION MACROECONOMIC MODELS TARIFF BARRIER IMPERFECT COMPETITION CAPITAL GOOD MARKETS WTO TARIFF REDUCTIONS OPEN ECONOMY PREFERENTIAL TARIFF REDUCTION ACCESS WELFARE GAINS PREFERENTIAL AGREEMENTS TRADE POLICY ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL UTILITY TRADE AGREEMENT NATURAL RESOURCES PREFERENTIAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICIES ECONOMIC RESEARCH EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS UNEMPLOYMENT BORDER TRADE LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE CONSUMPTION VALUE ADDED UNILATERAL TRADE CAPITAL WAGES TRADE PREFERENCES INTERNATIONAL TRADE TRADE COSTS VALUE FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION PURCHASING POWER CONCESSIONS TRADE REFORM AGRICULTURE CONSUMERS TARIFF BARRIERS TRADE AREA TRADE FACILITATION RETURN ON CAPITAL MEASUREMENT WAGE RATE UNILATERAL REDUCTION BENCHMARK ECONOMIC THEORY TRADE LIBERALIZATION TERMS OF TRADE REGULATORY REGIMES TRADE DIVERSION TRADE DATA REGIONAL INTEGRATION MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS TRADE ECONOMIC INTEGRATION GDP GOODS THEORY AGGREGATE TRADE GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS GLOBAL TRADE MARKET SHARE BILATERAL TRADE MULTILATERAL TRADE REFORM INVESTMENT REGIONAL TRADE INTEGRATION DOMESTIC PRODUCTION CUSTOMS UNIONS PREFERENTIAL TRADE TERMS OF TRADE LOSS TARIFF FREE TRADE AREA WORLD TRADE UNILATERAL TRADE LIBERALIZATION UNSKILLED WORKERS PREFERENTIAL TARIFF BENCHMARK DATA MACROECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY APPAREL PRICE INDEX AGGREGATE EXPORTS IMPORT VALUE UNSKILLED LABOR PRICES UNILATERAL REFORMS MULTILATERAL LIBERALIZATION DEVELOPMENT POLICY GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODELING Evidence indicates that trade costs are a much more substantial barrier to trade than tariffs are, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. This paper decomposes trade costs into: (i) trade facilitation, (ii) non-tariff barriers, and (iii) the costs of business services. The paper assesses the poverty and shared prosperity impacts of deep integration to reduce these three types of trade costs in: (i) the East African Customs Union–Common Market of East and Southern Africa–South African Development Community "Tripartite" Free Trade Area; (ii) within the East African Customs Union; and (iii) unilaterally by the East African Customs Union. The analysis employs an innovative, multi-region computable general equilibrium model to estimate the changes in the macroeconomic variables that impact poverty and shared prosperity. The model estimates are used in the Global Income Distribution Dynamics microsimulation model to obtain assessments of the changes in the poverty headcount and shared prosperity for each of the simulations for the six African regions or countries. The paper finds that these reforms are pro-poor. There are significant reductions in the poverty headcount and the percentage of the population living in poverty for all six of the African regions from deep integration in the Tripartite Free Trade Area or comparable unilateral reforms by the East African Customs Union. Further, the incomes of the bottom 40 percent of the populations noticeably increase in all countries or regions that are engaged in the trade reforms. The reason for the poor share in prosperity is the fact that the reforms increase unskilled wages faster than the rewards of other factors of production, as the reforms tend to favor agriculture. Despite the uniform increases in income for the poorest 40 percent, there are some cases where the share of income captured by the poorest 40 percent of the population decreases. The estimated gains vary considerably across countries and reforms. Thus, countries would have an interest in negotiating for different reforms in different agreements. 2016-06-13T20:00:11Z 2016-06-13T20:00:11Z 2016-05 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/05/26345239/poverty-shared-prosperity-implications-deep-integration-eastern-southern-africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24498 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7660 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa East Africa Southern Africa