Commodities
The livelihoods of more than 2.5 billion people directly depend on the production and trade in primary commodities like rice, cotton and copper. At a family level, farmers and workers rely on commodity production for the cash incomes which they use to pay for foods, school fees and healthcare. At the national level, 95 of the 141 developing countries derive at least half of their foreign exchange earnings from commodity exports.
Consequently, the nature, accessibility and health of the international commodity markets have a very significant impact on people and governments. Our work in this area focuses on at least three distinction dimensions. First are the barriers to trade that deny developing countries huge potential revenues from the trade in commodities. Second are the growing environmental standards that developing country exporters need to navigate. Third are the volatile prices on international commodity markets that complicate fiscal planning and undermine livelihoods.
Research
Energy Security in South America and Southern Africa: Synthesis Report
Paper: Sheila Kiratu, 2011Trade and Food Security Policy in Tanzania
Paper: Sheila Kiratu, Lutz Märker, Adam Mwakolobo, 2011Climate Change Challenges in ASEAN-facilitated Interventions in the Mekong Subregion (Policy Report # 4)
Paper: Jessica Dator-Bercilla, Daphne Villanueva, Alexander C. Chandra, 2010Trade and Climate Change Implications for Food Security: The case of mainland Southeast Asia
Paper: Antonio Schiavone, 2010Food Security Policies in Maritime Southeast Asia: The case of Indonesia
Paper: Zamroni Salim, 2010Regional Food Security and Trade Policy in Southeast Asia: The Role of ASEAN
Paper: Alexander C. Chandra, Lucky A. Lontoh, 2010Flavia Thomé talks about the Trade Knowledge Network
Video: Flavia Thomé, Nona Pelletier (Interviewer), Jason E.J. Manaigre (Technical Producer), 2009How Might Agriculture Develop in Southern Africa? Making Sense of Complexity
Paper: Peter Draper, Sheila Kiratu, Tanja Hichert, 2009Trade Knowledge Network (TKN) Brochure
Outreach: Oli Brown, Flavia Thomé, Damon Vis-Dunbar, 2009Agriculture: Future Scenarios for Southern Africa – The Livestock Sector in Zambia and Rising Food Prices
Paper: Humphrey Mulemba, 2009Agriculture: Future Scenarios for Southern Africa – A Case Study of Zimbabwe’s Food Security
Paper: Evangelista Mudzonga, Tendai Chigwada, 2009Agriculture: Future Scenarios for Southern Africa – Country Briefing – Namibia
Paper: Mona Frøystad, Jürgen Hoffmann, Klaus Schade, 2009Agriculture: Future Scenarios for Southern Africa – Food Production in Mozambique and Rising Global Food Prices
Paper: Gilberto Biacuana, 2009Agriculture: Future Scenarios for Southern Africa – Ensuring Food Security through Trade Policy
Paper: Hilton E. Zunckel, 2009Boom or Bust: How commodity price volatility impedes poverty reduction, and what to do about it
Book: Oli Brown, Jason Gibson, Alec Crawford, 2008Price Volatility in the Cotton Yarn Industry: Lessons from India
Paper: Vijaya Switha Grandhi, Alec Crawford, 2007Innovation in the Agro-Industry Sector in Costa Rica: Main Determinants
Paper: Jeffrey Orozco, Carlos Murillo, 2007Commodity Revenue Management: The Case of Chile's Copper Boom
Paper: Alejandra Ruiz-Dana, 2007Commodity Revenue Management: India’s rapeseed/mustard oil sector
Paper: N.C. Pahariya, Chandan Mukherjee, 2007Tobacco Revenue Management: Malawi case study
Paper: Nelson Nsiku, Willings Botha, 2007Commodity Income Management: Selected Southeast Asian Economies
Paper: Hank Lim, Lim Tai Wei, 2007Consistently Inconsistent: Addressing income volatility among cocoa producers in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire
Paper: Jason Gibson, 2007Commodity Revenue Management: Coffee and Cotton in Uganda
Paper: Moses Masiga, Alice Ruhweza, 2007Supermarket Buying Power: Global Supply Chains and Smallholder Farmers
Paper: Oli Brown, Christina Sander, 2007Boom or Bust: Developing countries' rough ride on the commodity price rollercoaster
Paper: Oli Brown, Jason Gibson, 2006Trade Knowledge Network Brochure
Outreach: David A Boyer, 2005Lessons Learned on Trade and Sustainable Development
Book: Aaron Cosbey, 2004The relationship between trade and sustainable development of agriculture in Central America - Full Report
Paper: Rolando Zamora, Max Valverde, Carlos Pomareda, Carlos Murillo, Greivin Herandez, Adriana Campos, Randall Arce, 2004The Adoption of Transgenic Crops in Argentine Agriculture: An Open-ended Story - Full Report
Paper: Eduardo Trigo, Adres Lopez, Daniel Chudnovsky, Eugenio Cap, 2004Green Markets: Often A Lost Opportunity For Developing Countries - Full Report
Paper: Juan Ladron, Guillermo Geisse, Annie Dufey, Nicola Borregaard, 2003Economic and Environmental Impacts of First Generation Genetically Modified Crops: Lessons from the United States - Full Report
Paper: Charles Benbrook, 2003The relationship between trade and sustainable development of agriculture in Central America - Summary
Paper: Rolando Zamora, Max Valverde, Carlos Pomareda, Carlos Murillo, Greivin Herandez, Adriana Campos, Randall Arce, 2003The Adoption of Transgenic Crops in Argentine Agriculture: An Open-ended Story - Summary
Paper: Eduardo Trigo, Adres Lopez, Daniel Chudnovsky, Eugenio Cap, 2003Economic and Environmental Impacts of First Generation Genetically Modified Crops: Lessons from the United States - Summary
Paper: Charles Benbrook, 2003Green Markets: Often A Lost Opportunity For Developing Countries - Summary
Paper: Juan Ladron, Guillermo Geisse, Annie Duffey, Nicola Borregaard, 2003Environmental Impact of Cotton Production and Trade
Paper: Tariq Banuri, 1998

