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6 result(s) for "ANTI-EXPORT BIAS"
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Argentine trade policies in the XX century: 60 years of solitude
At the turn of the last century, the Argentine economy was on a path to prosperity that never fully developed. International trade and trade policies are often identified as a major culprit. In this paper, we review the history of Argentine trade policy to uncover its exceptional features and to explore its contribution to the Argentine debacle. Our analysis tells a story of bad trade policies, rooted in distributional conflict and shaped by changes in constraints, that favored industry over agriculture in a country with a fundamental comparative advantage in agriculture. While the anti-export bias impeded productivity growth in agriculture, the import substitution strategy was not successful in promoting an efficient industrialization. In the end, Argentine growth never took-off.
Fostering higher growth and employment in the Kingdom of Morocco
This book identifies the binding constraints to growth of Morocco. It applies an innovative procedure known as “growth diagnostic” and has a central finding. The Moroccan economy suffers from a too slow process of structural transformation for achieving higher growth, especially for its exports that face unfavorable external shocks arising from competitor countries in the main markets for Moroccan exports. This process of so-called “productive diversification” requires that Morocco enhance its competitiveness.