This study responds to some of Mozambique’s basic development challenges and provides qualitative and quantitative insights for policymaking from an economywide perspective. The report
highlights the importance of agricultural development showing agriculture’s large sectoral multiplier effects and that applying scarce capital to agriculture is generally more effective than
applying it to industry and services. A novel CGE model is developed and used in a series of analyses focused on the impact and design of economic policy. Issues addressed are aid dependency,
biases in price incentives facing the agriculture sector, improvement in agricultural technology and marketing margins, risk-reducing behavior and gender roles in agricultural production, and
food aid distribution. The study also provides a future perspective and analyzes the Mozambican economy using dynamic macroeconomic modeling techniques, demonstrating that sophisticated
analytical tools can be of significant value, even in "data-poor" situations.