Author:
Naranpanawa Athula,Bandara Jayatilleke
Abstract
Purpose
There is a large body of literature on the link between trade liberalisation, growth and poverty. However, less attention has been paid to the relationship between trade and regional disparities. The purpose of this paper is to identify and quantify the regional impacts of trade liberalisation, particularly in the war-affected regions and to understand to what extent trade reforms can contribute to the post-war recovery process and long-term economic and political stability in Sri Lanka.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors developed a single country multi-regional computable general equilibrium (CGE) model for the Sri Lankan economy to meet the need for a detailed country study as emphasised in the recent literature.
Findings
Both short-run and long-run results suggest that all regions including war-affected regions in the country gain from trade liberalisation, although gains are uneven across regions. Furthermore, the results suggest that war-affected regions gain more relative to some other regions in the long run.
Originality/value
According to the best of the authors’ knowledge within country regional impact of trade liberalisation using a multi-regional CGE model has never been attempted for Sri Lanka. The results of this study, even though based on Sri Lankan data, will be relevant to other developing countries engulfed in internal conflicts with regional economic disparities.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Economics and Econometrics
Reference50 articles.
1. Regional modelling,2002
2. Ahmed, S. and Ghani, E. (2008), “Making regional cooperation work for South Asia’s poor”, Policy Research working paper, World Bank, Washington, DC.
3. Macroeconomic policies, crises and growth in Sri Lanka, 1969-1990,1994
4. Economic policy shifts in Sri Lanka: the post-conflict development challenge;Asian Economic Papers,2013
5. Computable general equilibrium models for development policy analysis in LDCs;Journal of Economic Surveys,1991