Journal of African Trade
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Volume 1, Issue 1-2, December 2014
Research Article
2. Does trade reduce poverty? A view from Africa☆
Maëlan Le Goff, Raju Jan Singh
Pages: 5 - 14
Although trade liberalization is being actively promoted as a key component in development strategies, theoretically, the impact of trade openness on poverty reduction is ambiguous. On the one hand, a more liberalized trade regime is argued to change relative factor prices in favor of the more abundant...
Research Article
3. The African Economic Partnership Agreements with the EU: Reflections inspired by the case of the East African Community☆
Jaime de Melo, Julie Regolo
Pages: 15 - 24
This paper appraises the likely effects of the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) between the East African Community (EAC) and the European Union (EU). Customs data are used to estimate the revenue and welfare effects of an EPA with and without an exception list. Revenue and welfare effects are rather...
Research Article
4. The industrialisation challenge for Africa: Towards a commodities based industrialisation path
Mike Morris, Judith Fessehaie
Pages: 25 - 36
Since the turn of the millennium many African economies have been reintegrated into the world economy on a positive note and experienced substantial economic growth. This growth has primarily been concentrated in commodity exports. The central question facing African economies is how to use economic...
Research Article
5. Attracting international private finance for African infrastructure☆
Paul Collier
Pages: 37 - 44
Africa’s trade is impeded by poor infrastructure. Inadequate transport infrastructure raises costs analogous to trade barriers, while inadequate power discourages investment. Yet Africa’s infrastructure needs greatly exceed its capacity to finance them. There is therefore a need, and an opportunity,...
Research Article
6. On the accuracy of trade and GDP statistics in Africa: Errors of commission and omission
Morten Jerven
Pages: 45 - 52
African trade statistics suffer from errors of commission and omission. A quarter-century ago, Alexander Yeats (1990) compared receipts of importers and exporters and concluded that the data could not be used to determine the magnitude, direction, or composition of trade. The only fact to be safely deduced...
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