EU Enlargement and Technology Transfer to New Member States, November 2005


Autoria(s): Desconhecido
Data(s)

2005

Resumo

The European Union (EU) accomplished its biggest enlargement process in 2004 in terms of the number of countries, area, and population. This study focuses on the impact of enlargement, the resulting technology transfer on the grain sectors of the New Member States (NMS), and the consequent welfare implications. The study finds that EU enlargement has important implications for the EU and the NMS, but its impact on the world grain markets is minimal. The results show that producers in the NMS gain from accession because of higher prices, whereas consumers in most NMS face a welfare loss. Incorporating technology transfer into the accession increases the welfare gain of producers despite falling prices because of the larger supply shift. The loss of welfare for consumers in most NMS is lower in this case because of the decline in grain prices.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://publications.iowa.gov/3114/1/05wp414.pdf

(2005) EU Enlargement and Technology Transfer to New Member States, November 2005. Iowa State University

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://publications.iowa.gov/3114/

Palavras-Chave #Economic forecasts #Agriculture and food production
Tipo

Departmental Report

NonPeerReviewed