International Food Policy Research Institute
IFPRI Home About Contact Careers Search  
Publications
IFPRI Publications 2020 Publications Search our Database Articles & Book Chapters Datasets Other Languages Order Form AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Discussion Paper No. 748
The Impact of CAFTA on Employment, Production and Poverty in Honduras
Samuel Morley, Eduardo Nakasone, and Valeria Piñeiro
January 2008
Abstract

In this paper we develop a dynamic CGE model to examine the impact of CAFTA on production, employment and poverty in Honduras. We model four aspects of the agreement: tariff reductions, quotas, changes in the rules of origin for maquila and more generous treatment of foreign investment. We first show that trade liberalization under CAFTA has a positive effect on growth, employment and poverty but the effect is small. What really matters for Honduras is the assembly (maquila) industry. CAFTA liberalized the rules of origin for imports into this industry. That raises the growth rate of output by 1.4% and reduces poverty by 11% in 2020 relative to what it would otherwise have been. Increasing capital formation through an increase in foreign investment in response to CAFTA has an even larger impact on growth, employment and poverty.

These simulations say something important about the growth process in a country like Honduras in which it seems reasonable to assume that there is underemployed, unskilled labor willing and able to work more at a fixed real wage. In such an economy changing the structure of demand in favor of sectors that use a lot of unskilled labor will have a big impact on growth. That is what the maquila simulation does, because maquila uses a lot of unskilled labor relative to skilled labor and capital. Alternatively the supply of capital can be increased by increasing the rate of capital formation. Either of these two has a far larger impact on growth and poverty than tariff reductions alone.

Download

Full Text
Send Feedback

We will post selected comments on this website. Please see our feedback guidelines for more information. Your e-mail address is required, but on request will not be posted.

Please use this form only for comments on this publication. To order a copy of the publication, please fill out the order form. For general comments on the website, use our website feedback form.

E-mail:
Post email address    Do Not Post email address
Comments:
    

TOP of the page