7 research outputs found

    Distortions to Agricultural Incentives in Cameroon

    Get PDF
    Distorted incentives, agricultural and trade policy reforms, national agricultural development, Agricultural and Food Policy, International Relations/Trade, F13, F14, Q17, Q18,

    Trade and exchange rate policy options for the CFA countries : simulations with a CGE model for Cameroon

    Get PDF
    This paper uses a computable general equilibrium model consistent with stylized facts about Cameroon to assess the impact of the 1994 regional fiscal reform. Two main elements characterize this model: it accounts for the asymmetric impact with trading partners and the dualism on product and factor markets through due consideration of both formal and informal sector's activities. Price formation in the model is standard, except that import prices are adjusted to take into account tax evasion and smuggling. Our analysis focuses on the macroeconomic impact and the welfare implications of the simulations. Overall, the various simulations lead to higher economic growth and expansion in employment. However, depending on the combination of taxes used, the sectoral effects are different. As a member of the CFA zone Cameroon can achieve a real depreciation on an individual basis through stringent fiscal and monetary policies or through a uniform tariff-cum-subsidy (UTCS) scheme, which is obtained via subsidies to selected export crops and high import tariffs. The simulation of this policy scenario leads to an increase in GDP at factor cost, while employment increases at a higher rate than in other scenarios; hence the unemployment rate falls and households' welfare increases. All households are better off in this simulation, although in the formal household category, welfare increased by a lesser amount

    Trade and Investment Policy Reforms in Cameroon: Impact Assessment and Perspectives

    No full text
    The paper analyzes the links between liberalization of trade and investment policy reforms and economic growth in Cameroon within 1980-2004. After identifying trade and investment policy reforms and market access conditions, which appears to gear towards liberalization, it appears that their expected results are still awaited. However, facts from the costs/benefits analysis tend to confirm the literature assertion that their long term benefit effects are superior to their short term adjustment costs. Despite the improvement in market access conditions thanks to trade preferences, the country did not take full advantage of that opportunity as well as those offered by trade and investment policy reforms because of the remaining trade, investment, institutional and economic bottlenecks including poor governance and external and mostly internal supply constraints. The growth elasticity determinant forecast model results show that additional reforms in view to lift those constraints are necessary and indispensable to boost growth in Cameroon

    Trade and Exchange Rate Policy Options for the CFA Countries: Simulations with a CGE Model for Cameroon

    No full text
    This paper uses a computable general equilibrium model consistent with stylized facts about Cameroon to assess the impact of the 1994 regional fiscal reform. Two main elements characterize this model: it accounts for the asymmetric impact with trading partners and the dualism on product and factor markets through due consideration of both formal and informal sector's activities. Price formation in the model is standard, except that import prices are adjusted to take into account tax evasion and smuggling. Our analysis focuses on the macroeconomic impact and the welfare implications of the simulations. Overall, the various simulations lead to higher economic growth and expansion in employment. However, depending on the combination of taxes used, the sectoral effects are different. As a member of the CFA zone Cameroon can achieve a real depreciation on an individual basis through stringent fiscal and monetary policies or through a uniform tariff-cum-subsidy (UTCS) scheme, which is obtained via subsidies to selected export crops and high import tariffs. The simulation of this policy scenario leads to an increase in GDP at factor cost, while employment increases at a higher rate than in other scenarios; hence the unemployment rate falls and households' welfare increases. All households are better off in this simulation, although in the formal household category, welfare increased by a lesser amount. Our principal objective is reached via three specific objectives. The first objective is to provide a synthesis of trade and exchange rate policy options under fixed and flexible exchange rates with reference to CFA member states. The second specific objective is to construct a social accounting matrix (SAM) and a CGE for Cameroon that are conducive to the analysis of trade policy based on data portraying the prevailing structure of the Cameroon economy. The final objective is to simulate alternative trade policy options in order to investigate their impact on growth performance. The rest of the paper unfolds as follows. In section two we present the trade and exchange rate policy options in Cameroon and other CFA countries; section three provides a description of the SAM used for the calibration of the model, which is specified in section four. Section five presents the simulation experiments and section six concludes with the ensuing policy recommendations.
    corecore