Compendium of Economic and Trade Indicators by Region, 1960 to 2004

This compilation of data is prepared as a companion to the Bank's research project on distortions to agricultural incentives. Its purpose is to provide comparative basic economic and trade indicators for the countries involved as case studies in that project. The project is global in coverage,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sandri, Damiano
Other Authors: Valenzuela, Ernesto, Anderson, Kym
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Washington, D.C The World Bank 2006
Series:Other papers
Subjects:
Gdp
Online Access:
Collection: World Bank E-Library Archive - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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653 |a Macroeconomics and Economic Growth 
653 |a GDP 
653 |a Agricultural Trade 
653 |a Population 
653 |a High-Income Countries 
653 |a Agricultural Workers 
653 |a Agriculture 
700 1 |a Valenzuela, Ernesto 
700 1 |a Anderson, Kym 
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082 0 |a 330 
520 |a This compilation of data is prepared as a companion to the Bank's research project on distortions to agricultural incentives. Its purpose is to provide comparative basic economic and trade indicators for the countries involved as case studies in that project. The project is global in coverage, and is sub-divided into five groups: Africa, Asia, Europe and Central Asia's Transition Economies, Latin America and the Caribbean, and high-income countries. The present compendium is divided into seven main sections. The first one includes data on high income countries which are compared with three aggregates for developing countries. Sections two through five focuses indeed specifically on one of the four regional groups and compare data for the case study countries with various aggregates of studied and not studied countries. Due to the very limited data availability several countries have not been included in the compendium. Finally, section six and seven include estimates of trade distortions, and sectoral shares of value added and household expenditures for all the studied countries and several regional aggregates