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On the Shadow Pricing of Traded Commodities

Peter Warr

Journal of Political Economy 1977

This paper extends the case for shadow pricing traded commodities at their relative international prices in benefit-cost analysis. This result is shown to hold (a) when there are nontraded commodities whose (possibly distorted) prices are indirectly affected by public production of traded commodities, and (b) when there is a government budgetary constraint. Contrary to arguments found in the literature, neither of these cases in itself provides an argument for shadow pricing traded commodities at values other than their relative international prices.

DOI
10.1086/260606
Volume
85 (4)
Pages
865-872
Language
en
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