@article{Anderson:331428,
      recid = {331428},
      author = {Anderson, Kym and Martin, Will and van der Mensbrugghe,  Dominique},
      title = {Market and Welfare Implications of Doha Reform Scenarios},
      address = {2005},
      pages = {83},
      year = {2005},
      note = {Presented at the 8th Annual Conference on Global Economic  Analysis, Lübeck, Germany},
      abstract = {This paper examines the market and welfare implications of  potential Doha reform scenarios. The first part of the  paper describes possible policy outcomes on the basis of  existing WTO negotiations and positions—first in the  agricultural sectors as identified by the so-called three  pillars: market access, domestic support and export  subsidies, second in non-agricultural market access  (so-called NAMA), and finally the other components of the  Doha negotiations. The second part of the paper provides a  quantitative assessment—using the World Bank’s dynamic  global general equilibrium trade model—of the first two  components, i.e. the three agricultural pillars and  non-agricultural market access, leaving aside the other  (important) components for which a quantitative assessment  is significantly more difficult. The analysis suggests that  an ambitious Doha round would take the global economy some  distance towards the maximum potential gain of global free  trade—up to one-third. However, because of the binding  overhang in tariffs, developing countries risk missing an  opportunity to make more significant gains in income and  exports.},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/331428},
}