This paper provides an in-depth examination of the trade effects of three regional trade agreements (RTAs) – the ASEAN Free Trade Agreement (AFTA), the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) and the Southern Cone Common Market (MERCOSUR) -- in the agricultural sector. Results from a gravity model suggest that the creation of AFTA, COMESA and MERCOSUR have increased trade in agricultural products between their member countries. There is no robust indication of trade diversion with respect to imports from outside the region. The agreements are therefore net trade creating. There is no robust indication however that there has been strong trade creation with non-members in the case of any of the RTAs under study. In some cases, lack of transport and communications infrastructure, in addition to supply constraints, lessens the effect of the RTA on trade flows. Trade costs such as transport and logistics seem to remain important factors in determining agricultural trade flows. In some RTAs, countries have a comparative advantage in exporting many of the same agricultural products, thereby decreasing the impact of the preferential market access. A number of implications for South-South RTAs can be drawn from examining these very different agreements.
Trade Impacts of Selected Regional Trade Agreements in Agriculture
Policy paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
Working paper
Insights from case studies of cobalt, lithium and nickel
18 December 202578 Pages -
Working paper3 December 202549 Pages
-
Working paper
The TiVA‑MoS database
12 September 202530 Pages -
Policy paper
Going paperless today, going paperless tomorrow
9 September 202554 Pages -
Working paper26 June 202545 Pages
-
Working paper25 June 202550 Pages
-
Working paper
The role of trade agreements and sustainability initiatives
9 May 202571 Pages
Related publications
-
Policy brief27 April 202612 Pages
-
20 April 202615 Pages -
8 April 202612 Pages
-
17 February 202673 Pages
-
20 January 20264 Pages