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           Focus
        | Climate Finance at COP21 and After 
 Finance has emerged in the last few years in and outside the Conference of the Parties (COP) process as a key ingredient of climate policy design. It also appears to be a key sector for structural reform in order to align it with the new low-carbon horizon. This policy brief, by  Etienne Espagne, draws lessons from a discussion platform launched jointly by CEPII and France Stratégie in the four months leading to COP21 and analyzes three directions for future debates.
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    	   publications
		 
	         
            
              
          
            
              Food trade, Biodiversity Effects and Price VolatilityCecilia Bellora, Jean-Marc Bourgeon
 
 
How Multi-Destination Firms Shape the Effect of Exchange Rate Volatility on Trade: Micro Evidence and Aggregate ImplicationsJérôme Héricourt, Clément Nedoncelle
 
 
Impact of European Food Safety Border Inspections on Agri-Food Exports: Evidence from Chinese FirmsLionel Fontagné, Anne-Célia Disdier, Matthias Beestermöller
 
 
The effect of local taxes on firm performance: evidence from geo referenced dataFederico Belotti, Edoardo di Porto, Gianluca Santoni
 
 
Inter-industry relatedness and industrial-policy efficiency: Evidence from China's Export Processing ZonesZhao Chen, Sandra Poncet, Ruixiang Xiong
 
 
With a Little Help from My Friends: Multinational Retailers and China's consumer Market PenetrationCharlotte Emlinger, Sandra Poncet
 
 
Exchange Rate Pass-through in Emerging Countries: Do the Inflation Environment, Monetary Policy Regime and Institutional Quality Matter?Antonia Lopez-Villavicencio, Valérie Mignon
 
 
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           Facts & Figures | 
 China is one of the countries most affected by RASFF rejections
 
 There is an increasing trend in rejections of Chinese shipments over time (with a dip in 2009 related to the crisis) suggesting a positive correlation between Chinese exports and Chinese rejections at the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) border. The strong increase in the number of rejections in 2008 might suggest that at the beginning of the 2008-2009 crisis, inspections and rejections were used potentially in a protectionist way, i.e. to protect European producers from Chinese competition.
 Lionel Fontagné, Anne-Célia Disdier, Matthias Beestermöller
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  To Stay Informed 
 ISSN: 1255-7072 
Editorial Director : Antoine Bouët 
Managing Editor : Dominique Pianelli
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