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  • Textbook
  • © 1993

Trade and Industrial Policy in Developing Countries

A Manual of Policy Analysis

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Table of contents (13 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-xviii
  2. Introduction and Overview

    1. Introduction and Overview

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 1-3
  3. Trade and Development

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 5-5
    2. Instruments of Trade and Industrial Policy

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 7-41
    3. Trade Policy and Development

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 42-59
  4. Tools of Policy Evaluation: Partial Analysis

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 61-61
    2. The Structure of Nominal Protection

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 63-77
    3. Effective Protection Analysis

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 78-97
    4. Domestic Resource Cost Analysis

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 98-114
  5. Tools of General Equilibrium Analysis

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 115-115
    2. Shift Analysis and the Incidence of Protection

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 117-135
    3. Computable General Equilibrium Modelling

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 136-161
    4. Applied CGE Analysis of Trade Policy

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 162-178
  6. Evaluating Comparative Advantage

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 179-179
    2. Revealed Comparative Advantage

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 181-193
    3. Potential Comparative Advantage

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 194-208
  7. The Modelling and Reformulation of Policy

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 209-209
    2. Structural Adjustment Lending: Rationale and Trade Policy Aspects

      • David Greenaway, Chris Milner
      Pages 211-225
  8. Back Matter

    Pages 243-265

About this book

This new book combines trade policy theory with ways of measuring the effects of policy interventions and identifies the main strengths and weaknesses of different economic approaches to measure the structure of the costs of production. The book also shows how the range of tools of evaluation may play complementary roles in the overall process of policy evaluation and provides a state of the art critical approach to commercial policy evaluation.

Authors and Affiliations

  • University of Nottingham, UK

    David Greenaway

  • Loughborough University, UK

    Chris Milner

Bibliographic Information