Search results for "International trade and water"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

The Economic Impact of Restricted Water Supply: a Computable General Equilibrium Analysis

2007

Water problems are typically studied at the level of the river catchment. About 70% of all water is used for agriculture, and agricultural products are traded internationally. A full understanding of water use is impossible without understanding the international market for food and related products, such as textiles. The water embedded in commodities is called virtual water. Based on a general equilibrium model, we offer a method for investigating the role of water resources and water scarcity in the context of international trade. We run five alternative scenarios, analyzing the effects of water scarcity due to reduced availability of groundwater. This can be a consequence of physical con…

Computable general equilibriumEnvironmental EngineeringWater scarcityNatural resource economicsWater supplyInternational trade and waterSustainable water supply/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/clean_water_and_sanitationWater scarcityFLOWSWater SupplyIRRIGATIONEconomicsComputer Simulationjel:Q25Waste Management and Disposaljel:Q28Water Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringComputable General Equilibrium Sustainable Water Supply Virtual Water Water Scarcitybusiness.industryEcological ModelingVirtual waterEnvironmental engineeringAgricultureComputable general equilibriumPollutionTRADEjel:D58Water resourcesModels EconomicPlus:VIRTUAL WATERVirtual waterDESALINATIONAllocative efficiencybusinessSDG 6 - Clean Water and SanitationWater use
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Early modern trade flows between smaller states : the Portuguese-Swedish trade in the eighteenth century as an example

2015

The eighteenth century was a period of many great power wars and competition for colonies. However, despite the turmoil, smaller nations were able to carve their niches in the international trade of the period. Examination of new sources, used in a comparative fashion, indicates that bilateral trade still has much to offer for the analysis of international trade history. The pattern of bilateral trade between Sweden and Portugal indicates that they were not equally dependent on that trade, and that the products traded varied over time. Usually bulk commodities dominated this trade, as each country focused on its core competencies. Overall, the volume of trade and the number of ships travell…

Economic integrationGreat powerInternational trade statisticsSwedenPortugalbusiness.industryEconomic historytaloushistoriaEighteenth centuryInternational trade and waterInternational tradetrade statisticslanguage.human_languageWarsCompetition (economics)GlobalizationBilateral tradeEconomicslanguagePortuguesebusinessFree tradeGlobalization
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The Economic Impact of the South-North Water Transfer Project in China: A Computable General Equilibrium Analysis

2006

Water resources are unevenly spread in China. Especially the basins of the Yellow, Hui and Hai rivers in the North are rather dry. To increase the supply of water in these basins, the South-to-North Water Transfer project (SNWT) was launched. Using a computable general equilibrium model this study estimates the impact of the project on the economy of China and the rest of the world. We contrast three alternative groups of scenarios. All are directly concerned with the South-to-North water transfer project to increase water supply. In the first group of scenarios additional supply implies productivity gains. We call it the "non-market" solution. The second group of scenarios is called "marke…

Water resourcesComputable general equilibriumEconomyNatural resource economicsbusiness.industryEconomicsMarket priceWater supplyNon-revenue waterInternational trade and waterbusinessWater scarcitySupply and demandSSRN Electronic Journal
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Trade And Environment: A Historical Perspective

2015

Abstract The relation between international trade and environmental and social issues has deep historical roots, having been manifest ever since the first industrial revolution. Ironically, the expansion of industrial activities marked, besides the exit from economic backwardness, the commencement of an inexorable war of men against nature. Concomitantly industrialization laid the groundwork for an explosive increase in international trade, which made the latter responsible for increasing environment degradation and social rights infringement. The removal of trade barriers in the first decades after the Second World War as well as the subsequent regulation induced by globalization rendered …

industrial revolution environmental issues social changes international tradeHF5001-6182Social Psychologybusiness.industryinternational tradeEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Social changeSocial rightsindustrial revolutionInternational tradeInternational trade and waterBackwardnessGlobalizationIndustrialisationenvironmental issuesEconomicsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)BusinessbusinessTrade barrierFree tradesocial changesStudies in Business and Economics
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