Title: Welcome to Econ 414 International Economics
1Welcome to Econ 414 International Economics
- Study Guide
- Week Ten
- Ending Friday November 2
2Assignment 4 (10 points)Key
- The statement American car producers will prefer
a new tariff on imported cars to an equivalent
amount of quota if the U.S economy is predicted
to be in recession in the near future. is true. - See the next two slides
3Suppose initially quota has the same effect as
tariff
- Tariff 2 per unit
- Quota 30
- Gain in producer surplus a
12
a
4Now domestic demand grows to D
Under quota, at p 12 there is a surplus ? P? to
11, domestic production goes down to 25 and
producer surplus goes down to c
Under tariff, P is still 12, imports go down to
to 10 and the gain in producer surplus remains
the same ( a b c)
Quota is more restrictive
12
b
11
c
40
55
25
5Here is a couple of questions the answers to
which is not in your book
- What is Fair Trade?
- Is it a distortion to free trade?
6- Fair trade is an organized social movement that
promotes the payment of a fair price as well as
social and environmental standards in areas
related to the production of a variety of goods. - The movement focuses on exports from developing
countries to developed countries, most notably
handicrafts, coffee, cocoa, tea, bananas, honey,
cotton, wine, fresh fruit etc.
7- Fair trade's strategic intent is to deliberately
work with marginalized producers and workers in
order to help them move from a position of
vulnerability to security and economic
self-sufficiency. - It also aims at empowering them to become
stakeholders in their own organizations and
actively play a wider role in the global arena to
achieve greater equity in international trade. - Fair trade proponents include international
religious, development aid, social and
environmental organizations such as Oxfam,
Amnesty International, and Caritas International. - The next slide shows a photo of a Oxfam store in
Galway
8(No Transcript)
9Controversy
- Some economists see fair trade as a type of
subsidy that distorts free trade. - Segments of the left criticize fair trade for not
doing enough.
10Chapter 8
- Suppose there is a proposal to impose a new
tariff on imported widgets - There are 10,000 consumers of widgets in the US
- Demand for widgets is perfectly inelastic
- Each American buys a widget no matter what the
price - If the tariff becomes effective, the price of
widgets goes up by 1 - That is each consumer loses 1
- All consumers together lose 10,000
- If the tariff becomes effective each of the 3
domestic producers of widget gain 1000.
11Case 1 Direct democracy
- Everyone has one vote
- All consumers vote against tariff
- The 3 producers vote for tariff
- Majority wins
- Tariff does not go into effect
12Case 2 Representative Democracy
- In order to make your representative aware of
your wish you need to hire a lobbyist who charges
500 - Who is more likely to hire the lobbyist?
- None of the consumers
- since they each will only lose 1 if the proposed
tariff become law. - and it takes time and effort to get organized.
- But each of the producers has an incentive to
hire the lobbyist since he will gain 1000 if the
tariff goes into effect. -
13So under Representative Democracy
- Tariff is likely to be imposed
- This is called rent seeking behavior
- Occurs when government approves a program that
benefits only a small group within society, but
the society as a whole pays the cost.
14Average Tariff Rate(Source World Bank)
15Total trade barriers (tariff and non tariff) in
comparison Source World Bank
16The Political Economy of Protectionism
- Facts
- Imports and exports have conflicting effects.
- Free trade benefits consumers but firms and
workers in importing industry can be harmed. - Regulation can favor one segment of society.
- Domestic industries and firms have a demand for
government regulation. - 5. Special interest groups lobby for changes that
benefit them.
17What is the public choice theory?
- It is the economic analysis of the political
process and government decision-making. - Assumptions
- Politicians attempt to maximize utility
- Utility comes in the form of votes
- Question
- Since trade benefits the country as a whole and
there are more consumers (voters) than firms,
shouldnt we expect politicians to favor free
trade?
18Answer
- Not necessarily
- The loss in one consumers surplus due to trade
restriction may not even be noticeable to him. - Consumers cannot easily form groups, get
organized and let politicians hear them but firms
can. - Given group support, votes to politician may
increase. - Politicians favor programs having immediate and
clear-cut benefits with vague or deferred costs. - Detailed tariff schedule allows politician to
pick up votes for protecting specific good
without protests from average consumer. - Tariffs on very similar goods may be very
different.
19Who does what?
- Firms with comparative advantage
- lobby foreign governments for free
- trade of exports.
- Firms that compete with imports
- would lobby for protection from
- imports.
20Who gets more protection and why?
- 1. Industries that are more important to a
country - are more likely to receive protection.
- 2. More concentrated an industry, more likely to
- have protection.
- Easier for firms to organize and lobby
- 3. Intermediate products easier to gain
protection - Voters unlikely to notice
- 4. Industries with a larger number of employees
are - more likely to get protection.
- 5. Regionally concentrated or unionized industry
are - more likely protected.
- 6. Industries with comparative disadvantage are
more - likely protected.
21 What is dumping?
- Two definitions
- Cost-based dumping
- A firm sells a product at a price below its
- cost of production in a foreign market.
- Price-based
- A firm sells a product in a foreign market at
- a price lower than the price charged in its home
market.
22Types of Dumping
- Sporadic dumping
- occasional dumping
- Persistent dumping
- Because there is more competition in
- the foreign market than at home.
- Predatory dumping
- Temporary
- To drive competing firms out of business.
23Antidumping law
- A law that does not allow an international
- firm to sell its product in an export market
- for less than it is sold for in its home
market. - Most countries have it
24Countervailing Duty
- A tariff imposed by a country that is
- designed to increase the price of the
- imported good by an amount equal to
- any export subsidies.
- Most nations have this too
25 Attention my dear students
You must know everything in this Chapter on GATT
and WTO
26The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Table 8.3 GATT and WTO Multilateral Trade
Negotiations
27Asst 5(20 points)Due Friday, November 2 before
10 PM
- 1. Visit the WTOs web page at wto.org to answer
the following questions - Is Iran a member of WTO? How about Iraq?
- Which country is the newest member of WTO?
- Is the following statement true or false?
Explain. WTO is for free trade at any cost. - Is the following statement true or false?
Explain. The voting power of a nation that is a
member of WTO depends on its GDP. - What was the size of the WTOs budget last year?
28Asst 5
- 2. Search the web (or elsewhere) for at least
two examples of countervailing and/or antidumping
duties imposed by the U.S. in the recent years.
Name the products and their exporting countries
and the nature of the imposed duties. Clearly
list your sources.