Export Prospects of Middle Eastern Countries: A Post-Uruguay Round Analysis

Export Prospects of Middle Eastern Countries: A Post-Uruguay Round Analysis

Author: Alexander Yeats

Publisher:

Published: 1999

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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February 1996 Middle Eastern countries' exports should increase by about $800 to $900 million as a result of the Uruguay Round tariff cuts. This represents an annual expansion of less than 1 percent. The projected overall gains are small because of the erosion of tariff preferences that these countries receive in OECD markets. The Uruguay Round made major progress in removing nontariff measures facing Middle Eastern exporters -- especially in agriculture, textiles, and clothing. As a result, the average OECD nontariff barrier coverage ratio for Middle Eastern exports should fall from 10 percent to between 1 and 2 percent. Exports in the Middle Eastern countries should increase from $800 million to $900 million as a result of the tariff cuts agreed on in the Uruguay Round, according to Yeats. This represents an annual expansion of less than 1 percent. Projected gains are small because the erosion of tariff preferences that Middle Eastern countries received in OECD markets offset the positive effects of reduced most-favored-nation tariffs on nonpreference-receiving products. And petroleum, the main Middle Eastern export -- which generally faces zero or low tariffs -- is unaffected by the Uruguay Round reductions. Egypt's projected gains (about $20 million, or under 0.5 percent of total exports) are concentrated largely in agricultural exports to the European Union and manufactures in the United States. Israel should experience net trade losses because of the erosion of its free trade area preferences in the European Union and the United States. The Uruguay Round made major progress in removing nontariff barriers that Middle Eastern exports face, especially in agriculture, textiles, and clothing. But with the removal of the Multifibre Arrangement, international trade in textiles and clothing will become much more competitive. Middle Eastern countries must adopt measures to cut costs and increase efficiency to remain viable exporters. As a result of what was achieved in the Uruguay Round, the average OECD nontariff barrier coverage ratio for Middle Eastern exports should fall from a current 10 percent to between 1 and 2 percent. Net food importing countries could be adversely affected by the higher international food prices expected to result from the Uruguay Round agreement. There is a clear priority for net food importers to adopt reforms stimulating domestic production. Prospects for increased trade in the Middle East are constrained by the similar comparative advantages and export profiles of many Middle Eastern countries. The most favorable prospects for intraregional trade appear to be between countries such as Cyprus, Israel, Lebanon, and Turkey -- net energy importers -- and the rest of the region. This paper -- a product of International Trade Division, International Economics Department -- is part of a larger effort in the department to identify factors affecting the exports of developing countries and to anticipate changes that may occur.


A US-Middle East Trade Agreement

A US-Middle East Trade Agreement

Author: Robert Z. Lawrence

Publisher: Peterson Institute

Published: 2006-01-01

Total Pages: 123

ISBN-13: 0881323969

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Would Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) between the nations of the Middle East and the United States be beneficial? What type of economic benefits could be expected? Since the FTA with Jordon was signed in October 2000, Jordanian exports to the US increased from $72.8 million in 2000 to a stunning $1.267 billion in 2005 and the exports were so large that the bilateral balance of trade shifted from a Jordanian deficit of $239 million in 2000 to a surplus of $624 million in 2005. Would other Middle Eastern countries derive similar benefits? Lawrence uses the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) model of world trade and economic activity to analyze the expected trade and other economic impacts of the prospective FTA and to examine bilateral trade and investment flows, bilateral trade frictions, and implications of the prospective accords for the bilateral, regional, and global trade relations of the countries involved.


Catching Up with the Competition

Catching Up with the Competition

Author: Bernard M. Hoekman

Publisher: University of Michigan Press

Published: 2010-05-18

Total Pages: 243

ISBN-13: 0472026461

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At a time when countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are joining the World Trade Organization, the lack of an economically sound analysis of trade policies in the region is especially notable. This volume remedies the situation by bringing together a distinguished group of applied trade economists to provide a broad view of the state of trade in and among the region's nations. The contributors provide original empirical analyses on key reform issues, and their work reflects deep knowledge of government concerns and policies. Part 1 sets the scene by comparing the performance of the MENA region with the rest of the world on a large number variables and indicators. Part 2 contains a number of CGE model-based analyses of trade policy reform options. Part 3 focuses on specific policy areas: standards as nontariff barriers and red tape, trade facilitation, an assessment of the impact of protecting intellectual property using partial equilibrium techniques, and a review of the existing Euro-Med agreements. Part 4 discusses how the region could benefit from WTO membership and from changing the existing regional integration schemes into arrangements that help promote a growth enhancing reform agenda. The volume will be essential reading for economists and policymakers working in and with the MENA nations, as well as officials at the multilateral and regional institutions. Contributors are A. Halis Akder, Benita Cox, Dean De Rosa, Hana'a Kheir El Din, Sherine El Ghoneim, Oleh Havrylyshyn, Bernard Hoekman, Denise Konan, Peter Kunzel, Will Martin, Keith Maskus, Mustapha Nabli, Thomas Rutherford, Elisabet Rutstrom, David Tarr, Subidey Togan, L. Alan Winters, Alexander Yeats, and Jamel Zarrouk. Bernard Hoekman is an Economist with the Development Research Group's Trade team of the World Bank. Jamel Zarrouk is an Economist with the Arab Monetary Fund.


The Egyptian Economy, 1952-2000

The Egyptian Economy, 1952-2000

Author: Khalid Ikram

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2007-04-11

Total Pages: 430

ISBN-13: 1134227531

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Interviews with former Prime Ministers and Cabinet Ministers along with previously unpublished analysis by the World Bank, IMF and USAID provide entertaining and interesting insights into Egypt's economic development policy during 1952 to 2000. Areas addressed include: * the performance of the Egyptian economy since 1950s * the factors that have facilitated or retarded economic performance * the Egyptian authorities approach to economic issues and policy-making * the chief questions that policy-makers will have to deal with in the next twenty years. Set apart by Khalid Ikram’s intimate knowledge of the Egyptian policy-makers this book presents a unique account of economic development and policy-making in Egypt during 1952 to 2000.


Did External Barriers Cause the Marginalization of Sub-Saharan Africa in World Trade?

Did External Barriers Cause the Marginalization of Sub-Saharan Africa in World Trade?

Author: Azita Amjadi

Publisher: World Bank Publications

Published: 1996-01-01

Total Pages: 160

ISBN-13:

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Urban Management Programme Paper No. 20. Reviews the specific actions that municipalities and city governments may take in contributing to urban poverty reduction. The paper highlights example of issues, options, and constraints that urban governments must address in fighting poverty. It focuses on municipalities and other city-level government entities as a critical institutional level of intervention. Other language editions available: French--Stock No. 13814 (ISBN 0-8213-3814-5); English--Stock No. 13716 (ISBN 0-8213-3716-5).


The Stock Market as a Source of Finance

The Stock Market as a Source of Finance

Author: Cherian Samuel

Publisher: World Bank Publications

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 52

ISBN-13:

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April 1996 Internal finance is less important for Indian firms than U.S. firms, and external debt more -- but for neither is the stockmarket an important source. In seeking funding, a firm's main choice is between external and internal financing. And, says Samuel, the evidence suggests that the stock market plays only a limited role providing finance for both U.S. and Indian firms. Samuel finds that internal finance plays less of a role for Indian firms than for U.S. firms -- and external debt a bigger role. This is consistent with theoretical predictions, given that information and agency problems are less severe for Indian firms than for U.S. firms. (India's financial system is predominantly bank-oriented, more like German and Japanese financial systems than like American and British systems.) Samuel's estimate of the role of the stock market as a source of finance is lower than other estimates, partly because of methodological approach: He studied sources and uses of funds, rather than the financing of net asset growth and capital expenditures. To the extent that these findings for India are generalizable to other developing countries -- analysis was restricted to the stock market's role in providing finance -- Samuel concludes that the development of stock markets is unlikely to spur corporate growth in developing countries. (Why, then, he wonders, do firm managers worry so much about share prices?) And there's a caveat: Foreign investors have played only a limited role in the slow-paced privatization of India's state-owned enterprises -- although in recent years, despite delayed reform of the securities market, foreign institutional investors have begun to invest more. In emerging markets in Eastern Europe and Latin America, foreign investors have played a much more active role in privatization, chiefly by investing in those stock markets. This paper is a product of the Operations Policy Group, Operations Policy Department. The author may be contacted at [email protected].