6,341 research outputs found
Asymmetric Dark Matter and the hadronic spectra of hidden QCD
The idea that dark matter may be a composite state of a hidden nonabelian
gauge sector has received great attention in recent years. Frameworks such as
asymmetric dark matter motivate the idea that dark matter may have similar mass
to the proton, while mirror matter and grand unified theories
provide rationales for additional gauge sectors which may have minimal
interactions with standard model particles. In this work we explore the
hadronic spectra that these dark QCD models can allow. The effects of the
number of light colored particles and the value of the confinement scale on the
lightest stable state, the dark matter candidate, are examined in the
hyperspherical constituent quark model for baryonic and mesonic states.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures. Additional discussion, matches published
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Sit down at the ball game: how trade barriers make the world less food secure
This paper analyses the impacts of trade policy responses to rising world food prices by carrying out a series of stylised experiments in the wheat market using a world trade model, GTAP. The sequence of events that is modelled comprises a negative wheat supply shock and subsequent implementation of an export tax by a major net exporter and a reduction in import tariffs by a small importer. The effects of trade policy responses are contrasted with those of full liberalisation of the wheat market. At the core are the (opposite) effects on producers and consumers, as well as the terms-of-trade and trade tax revenue effects. Food security is shown to depend crucially on changes in prices but also in incomes that are associated with changes in factor returns. The results reveal that major net exporters are generally better off when implementing export taxes for food security purposes. Large exporting countries export price instability causing world food prices to rise further. Net importing countries lose out and have limited leeway to reduce tariffs or subsidise imports. Liberalising wheat trade mitigates rising prices and contributes to food security, but to the detriment of production in Africa and Asia, making them more dependent on and vulnerable to changes in the world market. Concerted action at the WTO forum is required, notably clarifying and sharpening the rules regarding export measures.food security; world food crisis; international grain trade; trade measures; trade liberalisation; CGE modelling
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