Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-qxsvm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-10T18:28:12.523Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

La configuration Nord-Sud du commerce des produits alimentaires: Un essai prospectif et une expérience d’histoire économétrique.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 August 2016

Get access

Abstract

All the econometric studies on world food prospects lead to the picture of an increasing food trade deficit in the Third World. We discuss here this topic using a more global approach based on a general equilibrium framework covering the whole World Economy and involving disagregated rural and urban sectors. With this model, we analyses the impacts of Third World demography and debt, oil price, rural productivity and developed region growth. The model finds that the food trade in 1960 to 1995 is highly sensitive to these variables. The oil shocks and the resulting economic stagnation in the industrialized countries has broken trade patterns that were supposed to bring welfare to LDCs. These implied a North to South food trade balanced by a South to North manufactured trade. To sustain 5 percent growth in shrinking industrial world markets, the Third World, and especially the semi-industrialized countries, would be forced to « export urban hunger ». At the end of the century, food would flow from South to North, in the opposite direction from what has been unanimously predicted by other studies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain, Institut de recherches économiques et sociales 1983 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

(*)

Chercheur au Centre d’Economie Mathématique et d'Econométrie de l'Université Libre de Bruxelles, Consulant à la Banque Mondiale. Ce papier a été présenté aux Quatrièmes Journées Internationales de l'Association d'Econométrie Appliquée - Bruxelles - 8 et 9 décembre 1983. Je tiens à remercier Mme J. HERINCKX dont les remarques m’ont permis de clarifier mes idées et J. WAELBROECK qui est le père spirituel de la recherche dont cet article constitue un des aboutissements.

References

REFERENCES

Bale, M.D. & Duncan, R.C. (1983), Prospects for Food Production and Consumption in Developing Countries, World Bank Staff Working Paper n°596, Washington D.C. Google Scholar
Bessis, S. (1983), La dernière frontière, Edition Lattès, J.C., Paris.Google Scholar
Burniaux, J.M. (1983), Impact of Growth and of Agricultural Price Policies on Patterns of World Trade : a General Equilibrium Approach, CEME Discussion Paper n°8313 Free University of Brussels.Google Scholar
Burniaux, J.M. (1984), A Rural-Urban, North-South General Equilibrium Model: Theoretical Overview of the « RUNS Model », CEME Discussion Paper n°8401, Free University of Brussels.Google Scholar
Carfantan, J.Y. & Condamines, C. (1983), Vaincre la faim, c’est possible, Collection «Points-Politique», Edition du Seuil.Google Scholar
FAO (1979), Agriculture: toward 2000, Twentieth Session, Rome, 29 november 1979.Google Scholar
FAO (1977), The ICS: an Information Note, ICS Policy Group Sub-Committee (internal draft).Google Scholar
FINANCIAL TIMES (1983), No End of Trouble at the Mills by A. Moreton, 11 April 1983.Google Scholar
Gunning, J., Carrin, G., Waelbroeck, J. & Ass (1982), Growth and Trade on Developing Countries: a General Equilibrium Analysis, CEME Discussion Paper n°8210, Free University of Brussels.Google Scholar
THE IIASA FOOD AND AGRICULTURE PROGRAM (1981), Food for All in a Sustainable World, edited by Parikh, K. & Rabar, F..Google Scholar
Linnemann, H., De HOOGH, J., Keyzer, M.A. & Van HEMST, H.M.J. (1979), Moira: Model of International Relations in Agriculture, North-Holland Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Lundborg, P. (1981), Trade Policy and Development: Income Distributional Effects in the Less Developed Countries of the US and EEC Policies for Agricultural Commodities, Doctoral Dissertation, University of Gothenbürg.Google Scholar
Mellor, J.W. (1982), Third World Development: Food, Employment, and Growth Interactions, American Journal of Agricultural Economics.Google Scholar
Nagle, J.C. (1976), Agricultural Trade Policies, Saxon House, Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Revel, A. & Riboud, C. (1981), Les Etats-Unis et la stratégie alimentaire mondiale, Calmann-Lévy.Google Scholar
Squire, L. (1979), Labor Force, Employment and Labor Markets in the Course of Economic Development, World Bank Staff Working Paper n°336, Washington D.C. Google Scholar
WORLD BANK (1983), The World Development Report, Washington D.C. Google Scholar
WORLD BANK (1980), Price Prospects for Major Primary Commodities, Commodities and Export Projections Division, Report n°814/80.Google Scholar