This has important implications for current international commodity policy.

CAB Abstracts

...this is a fine monograph and its publication will be welcomed by both students and researchers alike. - David Sapsford. Economic Journal. September 1998.

The collapse in commodity prices since 1980 has been a major cause of the economic crisis in a large number of developing countries. This book investigates whether the commodity-producing countries, by joint action, could have prevented the price collapse by appropriate supply management. The analysis is focused on the markets for the tropical beverage crops: coffee, cocoa, and tea. Using new econometric models for each market, the impact of alternative supply management schemes on supply, consumption, prices, and export earnings is simulated for the later 1980s. The results indicate that supply management by producing countries would, indeed, have been a viable alternative to the `free market' approach favoured by the developed countries. This has important implications for current international commodity policy, and, in particular, for future joint action by producing countries to overcome persistent commodity surpluses as a complement to needed diversification.
Read more
The collapse in commodity prices since 1980 have been a major cause of the economic crisis in a large part of the Third World. This book demonstrates, using new econometric models, that the producing countries could have prevented this price collapse by appropriate supply management.
Read more
`This has important implications for current international commodity policy.' CAB Abstracts ...this is a fine monograph and its publication will be welcomed by both students and researchers alike. - David Sapsford. Economic Journal. September 1998.
Read more

Product details

ISBN
9780198233381
Published
1997
Publisher
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Weight
459 gr
Height
224 mm
Width
144 mm
Thickness
20 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
256