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Putting Development Back into the Doha Agenda: Poverty Impacts of a WTO Agreement

Start: 
06/04/2005 (All day)
End: 
06/04/2005 (All day)
TIPS and the WITS School of Economics and Business Sciences hosted, on behalf of the World Bank, a seminar on poverty impacts of the Doha Development Agenda.
This seminar reported on the findings from a forthcoming book based on a major international research project investigating the poverty impacts of a potential Doha Development Agenda Agreement.
Venue: 
Pretoria Holdiday Inn, Beatrix Street, Arcadia
doha_agenda.gif

Event Publications

  • Anderson, K. and Martin, W. (2005) Agricultural Trade Reform and the Doha Development Agenda
  • W. Hertel, T. and Alan Winters, L. (2005) Poverty Impacts of a WTO Agreement: Synthesis and Overview
  • Arndt, C. (2005) The Doha Trade Round and Mozambique
  • F. Balat, J. and G. Porto, G. (2005) The WTO Doha Round, Cotton Sector Dynamics and Poverty Trends in Zambia
  • Arnault Emini, C. , Cockburn, J. and Decaluwe, B. (2005) The Poverty Impacts of the Doha Round and the Role of Tax Policy: A Case Study for Cameroon
  • Anderson, K. , Martin, W. and van der Mensbrugghe, D. (2005) Would Multilateral Trade Reform Benefit Sub-Saharan Africans?

Event Links

WITS School of Economics and Business Sciences
World Bank
Doha Development Agenda

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What is TIPS?

TIPS is an independent, not-for-profit economic research institution that has been actively supporting the development of economic policy since its inception in 1996. We facilitate policy development and dialogue across six key policy pillars including Trade, African Economic Integration, Industrial Development, Inequality and Economic Marginalisation, Sustainable Development and Rural Development. We work closely with economic policy stakeholders in South Africa and beyond into Africa, particularly from the public sector and civil society, drawing from our networks with academia and other research partners across the continent and beyond.