Understanding the World Wool Market: Trade, Productivity and Grower Incomes. Part 1: Introduction

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Verikios, George (2006) Understanding the World Wool Market: Trade, Productivity and Grower Incomes. Part 1: Introduction. Working Paper. School of Economics and Commerce, the University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia.

Abstract

This is the front matter and Chapter 1 of my PhD thesis Understanding the World Wool Market: Trade, Productivity and Grower Incomes, UWA, 2006. The full thesis is available as Discussion Papers 06.19 to 06.24. The core objective of this thesis is summarised by its title: “Understanding the World Wool Market: Trade, Productivity and Grower Incomes”. Thus, we wish to aid understanding of the economic mechanisms by which the world wool market operates. In doing so, we analyse two issues – trade and productivity – and their effect on, inter alia, grower incomes. To achieve the objective, we develop a novel analytical framework, or model. The model combines two long and rich modelling traditions: the partial-equilibrium commodity-specific approach and the computable-general-equilibrium approach. The result is a model that represents the world wool market in detail, tracking the production of greasy wool through five off-farm production stages ending in the production of wool garments.

Item type Monograph (Working Paper)
URI https://vuir.vu.edu.au/id/eprint/29235
Official URL http://msc.uwa.edu.au/?f=146990
Subjects Historical > FOR Classification > 1402 Applied Economics
Historical > Faculty/School/Research Centre/Department > College of Business
Keywords world wool trade
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