ABSTRACT

The book is composed of a series of case studies. The countries included reflect the interest and experience of the authors who collaborated in preparing the volume. No attempt was made to provide representative coverage based upon a comprehensive classiftcation of countries, which is why there are no chapters dealing with such exporters as Argentina or Thailand or importers such as Egypt or Japan. Despite the somewhat eclectic geographical mix, many of the fundamental issues that face the North and the South, both individually and collectively, are illustrated by the case countries. We would argue that there is much to be learned about the effective implementation of policy choices and the constraints that policymakers face by looking at individual country experiences, rather than by attempting to generalize on the basis of an abstract theoretical framework There is a dearth of information on what countries actually do in managing domestic grain markets.

chapter 2|25 pages

Australia

chapter 3|22 pages

Canada

chapter 5|35 pages

The United States

chapter 6|26 pages

Cameroon

chapter 7|26 pages

Colombia

chapter 8|27 pages

China

chapter 9|23 pages

The Dominican Republic

chapter 10|38 pages

India

chapter 11|39 pages

Indonesia

chapter 12|28 pages

Mexico