Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration

Many of the countries in the Southern Africa region have very sketchy trade data, due to disruptions in data collection (caused by war in the case of Mozambique and sanctions-induced secrecy in South Africa, for instance) or weak statistical institutions. These trade data are also often in conflict...

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Main Authors: Mukherjee, Natasha, Robinson, Sherman
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157110
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author Mukherjee, Natasha
Robinson, Sherman
author_browse Mukherjee, Natasha
Robinson, Sherman
author_facet Mukherjee, Natasha
Robinson, Sherman
author_sort Mukherjee, Natasha
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Many of the countries in the Southern Africa region have very sketchy trade data, due to disruptions in data collection (caused by war in the case of Mozambique and sanctions-induced secrecy in South Africa, for instance) or weak statistical institutions. These trade data are also often in conflict with one another, occasionally even by several orders of magnitude. While much anecdotal information on trade flows exists (especially on newly created trade), it is only now that basic and systematic research on formal trade flows in Southern African is being conducted (e.g. USAID-funded EAGER project and Will Masters at Purdue University, David Evans at University of Sussex, International Food Policy Research Institute's Macroeconomic Reforms and Regional Integration in Southern Africa — MERRISA project). The sparse research agenda on trade issues is a serious problem, in light of Southern Africa's desire for deepened regional integration, improved prospects for economic growth, and equitable development. This paper will present trade (exports and imports, at a 1-digit SITC level, but with maize listed as a separate trade item) data from approximately 20 different sources, both from individual countries and international organizations, for the period 1980-present. The paper will show the major inconsistencies in the trade data between the different data sources. The main contribution of this paper is the reconciliation of the trade data, using a 'cross-entropy' estimation method, to make efficient use of prior information about the structure of trade in the Southern Africa region. The benefit of this approach is that it is very flexible and undemanding in its statistical assumptions, and it allows the use of the trade information in a variety of forms, such as inequality constraints, errors in measurement, and extraneous estimates of various parameters. To date, the cross-entropy method has been applied to the Social Accounting Matrices (SAMs) for the MERRISA countries, including the SAM for Zimbabwe.
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spelling CGSpace1571102025-11-06T07:26:04Z Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration Mukherjee, Natasha Robinson, Sherman economic situation social impact assessment mathematical models trade policies trade liberalization development productivity Many of the countries in the Southern Africa region have very sketchy trade data, due to disruptions in data collection (caused by war in the case of Mozambique and sanctions-induced secrecy in South Africa, for instance) or weak statistical institutions. These trade data are also often in conflict with one another, occasionally even by several orders of magnitude. While much anecdotal information on trade flows exists (especially on newly created trade), it is only now that basic and systematic research on formal trade flows in Southern African is being conducted (e.g. USAID-funded EAGER project and Will Masters at Purdue University, David Evans at University of Sussex, International Food Policy Research Institute's Macroeconomic Reforms and Regional Integration in Southern Africa — MERRISA project). The sparse research agenda on trade issues is a serious problem, in light of Southern Africa's desire for deepened regional integration, improved prospects for economic growth, and equitable development. This paper will present trade (exports and imports, at a 1-digit SITC level, but with maize listed as a separate trade item) data from approximately 20 different sources, both from individual countries and international organizations, for the period 1980-present. The paper will show the major inconsistencies in the trade data between the different data sources. The main contribution of this paper is the reconciliation of the trade data, using a 'cross-entropy' estimation method, to make efficient use of prior information about the structure of trade in the Southern Africa region. The benefit of this approach is that it is very flexible and undemanding in its statistical assumptions, and it allows the use of the trade information in a variety of forms, such as inequality constraints, errors in measurement, and extraneous estimates of various parameters. To date, the cross-entropy method has been applied to the Social Accounting Matrices (SAMs) for the MERRISA countries, including the SAM for Zimbabwe. 1996 2024-10-24T12:47:24Z 2024-10-24T12:47:24Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157110 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Mukherjee, Natasha; Robinson, Sherman. 1996. Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration. TMD Discussion Paper 15. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157110
spellingShingle economic situation
social impact assessment
mathematical models
trade policies
trade liberalization
development
productivity
Mukherjee, Natasha
Robinson, Sherman
Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration
title Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration
title_full Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration
title_fullStr Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration
title_full_unstemmed Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration
title_short Southern Africa: economic structure, trade, and regional integration
title_sort southern africa economic structure trade and regional integration
topic economic situation
social impact assessment
mathematical models
trade policies
trade liberalization
development
productivity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/157110
work_keys_str_mv AT mukherjeenatasha southernafricaeconomicstructuretradeandregionalintegration
AT robinsonsherman southernafricaeconomicstructuretradeandregionalintegration