@article{Anderson:172343,
      recid = {172343},
      author = {Anderson, Kym},
      title = {Does Agricultural Growth in Poor Countries Harm  Agricultural-Exporting Rich Countries?},
      journal = {Agricultural Economics: The Journal of the International  Association of Agricultural Economists},
      address = {1989-12},
      number = {968-2016-75689},
      pages = {14},
      year = {1989},
      abstract = {The commonly held view that agricultural-exporting  developed countries would lose from agricultural
growth in  less-developed countries (LDCs) is shown to be based on an  incomplete argument.
It considers only the effects on LDC  agricultural supply, or at best only that and the  firstround
effects of increased farmer incomes on the  demand for tradables. What also needs to be
considered is  the effect on the demand for nontradables and hence the  second-round effects of
increased spending by producers of  nontradables. When all these effects are considered, the  positive
correlations obtained between agricultural output  growth in LDCs and agricultural imports
from developed  countries is not surprising. It is then shown that selling  or giving away agricultural
research and management skills  to developing countries can be beneficial to developed  countries,
including agricultural exporters: by setting out  to do good, they may end up also doing well.},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/172343},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.22004/ag.econ.172343},
}