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Provedor de dados:  AgEcon
País:  United States
Título:  Agricultural Efficiency Gains and Trade Liberalization in Sudan
Autores:  Siddig, Khalid H.A.
Babiker, Babiker Idris
Data:  2011-08-10
Ano:  2011
Palavras-chave:  Agricultural efficiency
Liberalization
Sudan SAM
CGE analysis
Agribusiness
Agricultural and Food Policy
Agricultural Finance
Consumer/Household Economics
Crop Production/Industries
Food Security and Poverty
Labor and Human Capital
Land Economics/Use
Production Economics
Productivity Analysis
D2
D5
D6
E1
E2
F1
F2
H2
Resumo:  The traditional agriculture in Sudan occupies 60% of the total cultivated land and employs 65% of the agricultural population. Nevertheless, it is characterized by its low crop productivity, which is mainly driven by low technical efficiency, while drought and civil conflicts threaten most of its areas countrywide. Therefore, it has contributed only an average of 16% to the total agricultural GDP during the last decade. This paper addresses from an empirical point of view the sectoral and macroeconomic implications of agricultural efficiency improvement in Sudan and assesses the efficiency gains under the assumption of trade liberalization. Efficiency improvement experiments are implemented by augmenting the efficiency parameters of labor, capital, and land in a Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) framework. The CGE model of the study relies on the newly produced Sudanese Social Accounting Matrix (SAM), which provides data on 10 agricultural sectors, 10 industrial sectors and 13 service sectors. Results show that improving the agricultural efficiency would lead to improvements in GDP, welfare level, and trade balance. In addition it would also improve the output and competitiveness of the Sudanese agricultural exports and increase their strength to face the challenges of liberalization.
Tipo:  Working or Discussion Paper
Idioma:  Inglês
Identificador:  http://purl.umn.edu/112786
Relação:  University of Khartoum, Sudan>Department of Agricultural Economics>Agricultural Economics Working Paper Series
Agricultural Economics Working Paper Series
1
Formato:  29
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