The impact of trade liberalization on household welfare in Vietnam

"What is the effect of trade liberalization on households in developing countries? To what extent do the poor benefit when local markets are made more accommodative to international trade? The author empirically analyzes the distributional impact of trade policies on households in a low-income...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Seshan, Ganesh
Corporate Author: World Bank
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: [Washington, D.C] World Bank 2005
Series:Policy research working paper
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: World Bank E-Library Archive - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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100 1 |a Seshan, Ganesh 
245 0 0 |a The impact of trade liberalization on household welfare in Vietnam  |h Elektronische Ressource  |c Ganesh Seshan 
260 |a [Washington, D.C]  |b World Bank  |c 2005 
653 |a Poverty / Vietnam 
653 |a Free trade / Vietnam 
653 |a Households / Vietnam 
653 |a Cost and standard of living / Vietnam 
653 |a Income distribution / Vietnam 
710 2 |a World Bank 
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490 0 |a Policy research working paper 
500 |a Includes bibliographical references. - Title from PDF file as viewed on 4/11/2005 
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082 0 |a 330 
520 |a "What is the effect of trade liberalization on households in developing countries? To what extent do the poor benefit when local markets are made more accommodative to international trade? The author empirically analyzes the distributional impact of trade policies on households in a low-income country with a large rural economy where labor markets are imperfect. The methodology in this paper, which can be applied to various types of labor market conditions, relates changes in prices attributed to trade reforms to changes in household welfare, income distribution, and poverty using theoretically consistent measures of producer and consumer welfare. The author investigates the effects on poverty and income distribution of national and international market integration in Vietnam's rice sector and fertilizer market between 1993 and 1998, a period of ongoing market reforms when the national poverty rate fell sharply from 59 percent to 37 percent. He finds that when the effects of opening the rice and fertilizer market are isolated, Vietnam's agricultural trade reforms did not contribute to a significant improvement in overall household welfare or decline in poverty over this period. Nonetheless, the liberalization exercise can explain about half of the reduction in poverty incidence among farm households. The results also show that liberalization did not exacerbate income inequality, but did generate gains for rural households across the distribution, particularly the poor, at the expense of urban households. "--World Bank web site