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From Trade Theory to Trade Policy

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Title: From Trade Theory to Trade Policy


1
From Trade Theory to Trade Policy
  • Gains from Trade due to comparative advantage,
    produce surplus, convert it into export to pay
    for imports in case of unrestricted free trade.
    But the trading world is at best imperfect.
  • Primary commodities exports may experience a
    long-run decline in prices --- Prebisch-Singer
    theorem. Thus, an emphasis on manufacturing may
    be justified. But imperfect capital markets may
    not allow countries to follow this path. Thus,
    trade policy that restricts imports while a
    country gains comparative advantage might be an
    option.
  • Free trade gains are possible but subject to two
    qualifications
  • The gains are usually unequally distributed
    -gtStolpher-Samuelson Theorem
  • Missing markets or incomplete markets may provide
    counter arguments against free trade.
  • Chapter 17 discusses two policies related to
    trade.
  • 1. Export Promotion use of export subsidies,
    directed credit and their effects on
  • Welfare
  • 2. Import Substitution use of tariffs and
    quotas to restrict imports, their effects on
  • exchange rates and welfare.
  • The practice of strict import-substitution by
    many countries has been reduced as
  • more countries switch to export promotion. Two
    policies, stabilization (by the IMF)
  • and structural adjustment (by the WB) expedited
    the switch to export promotion.

2
Trade Policy
  • Ongoing controversy on the
  • Content of appropriate trade strategy
  • Consequences of trade openness on growth

Empirical debate on the trade and growth
nexus Numerous papers emphasized a positive
link Dollar (1992), Sachs and Warner
(1995) Growing criticism Rodrik and Rodriguez
(2000) Read Globalization Survey Krugmans
Ricardos Difficult Idea in his defense of the
principle of comparative advantage.
  • GROWING CONSENSUS
  • Need to improve the measurement of trade policy
  • No unconditional impact of trade policy
  • depends on the context (growth or recession
    period)
  • depends on the country (specialization,
    institutions, accompanying measures)

3
Problems of the Dual Economy
  • Most developing countries are characterized by
    economic dualism.
  • A high-wage, capital-intensive industrial sector
    coexists with a low-wage traditional sector.
  • Dualism is associated with trade policy for two
    reasons
  • Dualism is probably a sign of markets working
    poorly (market failure case for deviating from
    free trade).
  • The creation of the dual economy (an economy that
    is characterized by economic dualism) has been
    helped by import-substitution policies.
  • Problems of the Dual Economy
  • A. The Symptoms of Dualism
  • Development often proceeds unevenly and results
    in a dual economy
  • consisting of a modern sector and a traditional
    sector.
  • The modern sector typically differs from the
    traditional sector in that it
  • has --Higher value of output per worker
    -Higher wages,-Lower returns to capital,--Higher
    capital intensity,--Persistent unemployment
    (especially in urban areas)

4
Problems of the Dual Economy
  • B. Dual Labor Markets and Trade Policy
  • The symptoms of dualism are clear signs of an
    economy that is not working well, especially in
    its labor markets.
  • Wage differentials argument
  • The wage differences between manufacturing and
    agriculture is a justification for encouraging
    manufacturing at agricultures expense.
  • When there is a wage differential, the
    manufactures wage (WM) must be higher than the
    food wage (WF).
  • The Harris-Todaro model
  • It links rural-urban migration and unemployment
    that undermines the case for favoring
    manufacturing employment, even though
    manufacturing does offer higher wages.
  • Countries with highly dualistic economies also
    seem to have a great deal of urban unemployment.
  • An increase in the number of manufacturing jobs
    will lead to a rural-urban migration so large
    that urban unemployment actually rises.
  • It helps the wage differentials argument to be in
    disfavor with economists.

5
Problems of the Dual Economy
The Effect of a Wage Differential
6
Problems of the Dual Economy EXPORT PROMOTION
  • C. Trade Policy as a Cause of Economic Dualism
  • Trade policy has been accused both of
  • Widening the wage differential between
    manufacturing and agriculture
  • Fostering excessive capital intensity
  • Wage differentials are viewed as
  • A natural market response
  • The monopoly power of unions whose industries are
    sheltered by import quotas from foreign
    competition
  • Export-Oriented Industrialization the East Asian
    Miracle
  • From the mid-1960s onward, exports of
    manufactured goods, primarily to
  • advanced nations, was another possible path to
    industrialization for the
  • developing countries.
  • High performance Asian economies (HPAEs)
  • A group of countries that achieved spectacular
    economic growth. In some cases, they achieved
    economic growth of more than 10 per year.

7
Trade policy in practice Failure of Export
Promotion
  • Unfavorable demand side factors
  • 1) Low income elasticities of demand of primary
    products
  • 2) Little demand expansion with low population
    growth in developed
  • countries
  • 3) Low price elasticities of demand of primary
    products
  • 4) Development of synthetic substitutes
  • 5) Increased efficiency in industrial uses of raw
    materials
  • 6) Rising tide of protectionism for agriculture
    in developed countries
  • 7) Oligopolistic control of commodity markets in
    developed countries
  • 8) Shift from material-intensive goods to
    high-technology, skill-intensive products
    decline in the demand for raw materials

8
Trade policy in practice Failure of Primary
Export promotion
  • Unfavorable supply side factors
  • 1) Rising productivity of agriculture in
    developed countries
  • 2) Increasing competitive sources of supply in
    developing countries
  • 3) Lack of product differentiation
  • 4) Failure of international commodity agreements
    aimed at stabilizing prices and cooperate to set
    output levels
  • 5) Structural rigidity in rural production system
    of LDC prevents supply responses
  • 6) Lack of incentives taxes on exports reduce
    earnings and overvalued exchange rates reduce
    export competitiveness
  • 7) Supply is discouraged by pernicious effects of
    developed countries trade (subsidies) and foreign
    aid policies

Read Addiction to Sugar Subsidies Paper
9
Trade Policy in Practice Illustration
  • Rich countries spend some US300 billion a year
    on farm subsidies, about six times more than on
    development aid.
  • Every European Union (EU) cow gets about 2.50 a
    day in subsidies, a Japanese cow gets 7.50 a
    day!
  • The World Bank estimates that getting rid of farm
    subsidies in rich countries would cause a 17
    percent rise in global agriculture production
  • Summarizing
  • Demand side decline in demand for commodities
    and pressure for lower prices
  • Supply side increase in competition and
    discouragement of output and exports in
    developing world

10
Export-Oriented Industrialization the East Asian
Miracle
  • The Facts of Asian Growth
  • The World Banks definition of HPAEs contains
    three groups of countries, whose miracle began
    at different times
  • Japan (after World War II)
  • The four tigers Hong Kong, Taiwan, South
    Korea, and Singapore (in the 1960s)
  • Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and China (in the
    late 1970s and the 1980s)
  • The HPAEs are very open to international trade
  • Example In 1999, exports as a share of gross
    domestic product in the case of both Hong Kong
    and Singapore exceeded 100 of GDP (132 and 202
    respectively).
  • Trade Policy in the HPAEs
  • Some economists argue that the East Asian
    miracle is the payoff to the relatively open
    trade regime.
  • The data in the below Table suggests that the
    HPAEs have been less protectionist than other,
    less developing countries, but they have by no
    means followed a policy of complete free trade.
  • Low rates of protection in the HPAEs helped them
    to grow, but they are only a partial explanation
    of the miracle.

11
Export-Oriented Industrialization the East Asian
Miracle
Average Rates of Protection, 1985 (percent)
  • Industrial Policy in the HPAEs
  • Several of the highly successful economies have
    pursued industrial policies (from tariffs to
    government support for research and development)
    that favor particular industries over others.
  • Most economists have been skeptical about the
    importance of such policies because
  • HPAEs have followed a wide variety of policies,
    but achieved similarly high growth rates.
  • The actual impact on industrial structure may not
    have been large.
  • There have been some notable failures of
    industrial policy.

12
Export-Oriented Industrialization the East Asian
Miracle
  • Other Factors in Growth
  • Two factors can explain the rapid growth in East
    Asia
  • High saving rates
  • Rapid improvement in public education
  • The East Asian experience refutes that
  • Industrialization and development must be based
    on an inward-looking strategy of import
    substitution.
  • The world market is rigged against new entrants,
    preventing poor countries from becoming rich.
  • Summary
  • Trade policy in less-developed countries is
    concerned with two objectives
  • promoting industrialization and coping with the
    uneven development of the
  • domestic economy.
  • Government policy to promote industrialization
    has often been justified by the infant industry
    argument.
  • Many less-developed countries have pursued
    policies of import-substituting
    industrialization.
  • These policies have fostered high-cost,
    inefficient production.

13
Trade policy in practice Failure of Primary
Export promotion
  • IMPLICATIONS
  • Not only, impediments to export expansion are
    numerous, but
  • also export expansion results in lower export
    prices (thus a transfer of
  • income from poor to rich nations)
  • Thus, prospects of deterioration of terms of
    trade and thus of current account deficits
  • Prospects
  • grim as inevitability of further synthetic
    substitution
  • the unlikelihood of protection reduction in
    developed world
  • Static comparative advantages have dynamic
    disadvantages
  • Motivation for import substitution
    industrialization strategy
  • Thus prospects of deterioration of terms of trade
    and thus of current account deficits

14
Summary
  • Most developing countries are characterized by
    economic dualism.
  • Dual economies have a serious problem of urban
    unemployment.
  • The difference in wages between the modern and
    traditional sectors have sometimes been used as a
    case for tariff protection of the industrial
    sector.
  • The HPAEs have industrialized not via import
    substitution but via exports of manufactured
    goods.

15
Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • There is a great diversity among the developing
    countries in terms of their
  • income per capita.
  • Why are some countries so much poorer than
    others?
  • For about 30 years after World War II trade
    policies in many developing countries were
    strongly influenced by the belief that the key to
    economic development was creation of a strong
    manufacturing sector.
  • The best way to create a strong manufacturing
    sector was by protecting domestic manufacturers
    from international competition.
  • Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • From World War II until the 1970s many developing
    countries attempted to accelerate their
    development by limiting imports of manufactured
    goods to foster a manufacturing sector serving
    the domestic market.
  • The most important economic argument for
    protecting manufacturing industries is the infant
    industry argument.

16
Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • The Infant Industry Argument
  • It states that developing countries have a
    potential comparative advantage in manufacturing
    and they can realize that potential through an
    initial period of protection.
  • It implies that it is a good idea to use tariffs
    or import quotas as temporary measures to get
    industrialization started.
  • Example The U.S. and Germany had high tariff
    rates on manufacturing in the 19th century, while
    Japan had extensive import controls until the
    1970s.
  • Problems with the Infant Industry Argument
  • It is not always good to try to move today into
    the industries that will have a comparative
    advantage in the future.
  • Example In the 1980s South Korea became an
    exporter of automobiles, whereas in the 1960s its
    capital and skilled labor were still very scarce.
  • Protecting manufacturing does no good unless the
    protection itself helps make industry
    competitive.
  • Example Pakistan and India have protected their
    heavy manufacturing sectors for decades and have
    recently begun to develop significant exports of
    light manufactures like textiles

17
Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • Market Failure Justifications for Infant Industry
    Protection
  • -Two market failures are identified as reasons
    why infant industry protection may be a good
    idea
  • Imperfect capital markets justification
  • If a developing country does not have a set of
    financial institutions that would allow savings
    from traditional sectors (such as agriculture) to
    be used to finance investment in new sectors
    (such as manufacturing), then growth of new
    industries will be restricted.
  • Appropriability argument
  • Firms in a new industry generate social benefits
    for which they are not compensated (e.g. start-up
    costs of adapting technology).
  • Promoting Manufacturing Through Protection
  • Import-substituting industrialization--The
    strategy of encouraging domestic
  • industry by limiting imports of manufactured
    goods
  • Many less-developed countries have pursued this
    strategy.
  • Has import-substituting industrialization
    promoted economic development?
  • Many economists are now harshly critical of the
    results of import substitution, arguing that it
    has fostered high-cost, inefficient production.

18
Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • Promoting Manufacturing Through Protection
  • Import-substituting industrialization
  • The strategy of encouraging domestic industry by
    limiting imports of manufactured goods
  • Many less-developed countries have pursued this
    strategy.
  • Has import-substituting industrialization
    promoted economic development?
  • Many economists are now harshly critical of the
    results of import substitution, arguing that it
    has fostered high-cost, inefficient production.
  • Why not encourage both import substitution and
    exports?
  • A tariff that reduces imports also necessarily
    reduces exports.
  • Until the 1970s many developing countries were
    skeptical about the possibility of exporting
    manufactured goods.
  • In many cases, import-substituting
    industrialization policies dovetailed naturally
    with existing political biases.

19
Import-Substituting Industrialization
Exports as a Percentage of National Income, 1999
20
Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • Results of Favoring Manufacturing Problems of
    Import-Substituting
  • Industrialization
  • Many countries that have pursued import
    substitution have not shown any signs of catching
    up with the advanced countries.
  • Example In India, after 20 years of economic
    plans between the early 1950s and the early
    1970s, its per capita income was only a few
    percent higher than before.
  • Why didnt import-substituting industrialization
    work the way it was supposed to?
  • The infant industry argument was not as
    universally valid as many people assumed.
  • Import-substituting industrialization generated
  • High rates of effective protection
  • Inefficient scale of production
  • Higher income inequality and unemployment

21
Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • Promoting Manufacturing Through Protection
  • Import-substituting industrialization--The
    strategy of encouraging domestic industry by
    limiting imports of manufactured goods
  • Many less-developed countries have pursued this
    strategy.
  • Has import-substituting industrialization
    promoted economic development?
  • Many economists are now harshly critical of the
    results of import substitution, arguing that it
    has fostered high-cost, inefficient production.
  • Why not encourage both import substitution and
    exports?
  • A tariff that reduces imports also necessarily
    reduces exports.
  • Until the 1970s many developing countries were
    skeptical about the possibility of exporting
    manufactured goods.
  • In many cases, import-substituting
    industrialization policies dovetailed naturally
    with existing political biases.

22
Import-Substituting Industrialization
Effective Protection of Manufacturing in Some
Developing Countries (percent)
23
Import-Substituting Industrialization
  • Why didnt import-substituting industrialization
    work the way it was supposed to?
  • The infant industry argument was not as
    universally valid as many people assumed.
  • Import-substituting industrialization generated
  • High rates of effective protection
  • Inefficient scale of production
  • Higher income inequality and unemployment

24
Trade policy in practice Limited success of
import substitution
  • Import substitution entails an attempt to replace
    commodities that are being
  • imported, usually manufactured consumer goods,
    with domestic sources of
  • production and supply.
  • How?
  • -Erect tariff barriers or quotas on imported
    products
  • -Try to set up a local industry to produce these
    goods (buy technology or
  • attract foreign companies through tax
    incentives)
  • Rationale for bearing those costs
  • Industry will reap the benefits of large-scale
    production and lower costs
  • (infant industry argument for tariff
    protection)
  • Improvement of the balance of payments fewer
    imports.
  • Grown up infant industry will be able to compete
    in world markets and to
  • generate net foreign-exchange earnings once it
    has lowered its average costs
  • of production prerequisite for export promotion

25
Trade policy in practice Limited success of
import substitution
  • Expected benefits of protection
  • Protection against imports appears to be an
    appropriate means for fostering economies of
    scale, positive externalities, and industrial
    self-reliance as well as overcoming the pervasive
    state of economic dependence
  • Duties as major source of government revenue
  • Import restrictions represent an obvious response
    to chronic balance of
  • payments and debt problems.
  • Developing countries can gain greater control
    over their economic destinies while encouraging
    foreign business interests to invest in local
    import-substituting industries

26
Limited success of import substitution
  • Undesirable outcomes
  • 1. Many IS industries protected from competition
    remained inefficient
  • and costly to operate
  • To measure the degree of protection, we need to
    ask by how much
  • these restrictions cause the domestic prices of
    imports to exceed what
  • their prices would be if there were no
    protection.
  • Apparently low nominal protection can induce very
    high effective
  • protection percentage by which the value added
    at a particular stage
  • of processing in a domestic industry can exceed
    what it would be
  • without protection

27
Limited success of import substitutionUndesirabl
e outcomes
  • 2 Inflated prices of IS products increase costs
    for "forward" liked industries inhibition of the
    industrialization process
  • 3 Main beneficiaries of the IS process are
    foreign firms whose profits are remitted abroad
  • 4 Heavy and often government-subsidized
    importation of capital goods resulted in minimal
    employment effect and worsening balance of
    payments situation
  • 5 IS has often been accompanied by artificially
    overvalued local currency to lower the price of
    imports and as a result of repressed capital
    costs (interest rates)

28
Limited success of import substitution
Impediments to exports expansion of manufactured
goods
  • Empirically import substitution precedes export
    promotion/export-oriented
  • industrial strategy (cf. East Asian economies)
  • Example of East Asian economies is a source of
    inspiration
  • -encouraging indigenous skills, technologies, and
    firms
  • -not just promoting labor-intensive manufactures
    but actively and
  • systematically seeking to upgrade over time.
  • Opportunities to replicate this process may now
    be reduced
  • -traditional starting with textile exports is
    monopolized by Chinas workshop of the world
  • -new WTO rules would not permit discriminate
    support to industries (similar to South Korea in
    the 1970-80s)
  • -strategy requires competent and politically
    powerful government which is often not to be
    found in LDCs

29
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Typical framework and Dollar and Kraay
resultsRead Globalization Survey Paper
30
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Results
31
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Result sensitivity to the measures (Rodrik
critics)
1 Definition of globalization based on level or
evolution of tariffs
Globalizers have greater decline in tariffs but
have the highest tariffs!!
32
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Result sensitivity to the measures (Rodrik
critics)
2. Selection of the country sample
Outliers Tricks Globalizers include 6
additional countries (out of 18) that do not fit
the stated criteria based on the argument that
they joined GATT/WTO since the 1980s (in fact 42
countries did)
No tricks top 40 in terms of largest
proportionate reduction in tariffs and
largest proportionate increase in imports/GDP
over the period 1980-84 to 1995-97, and
select countries that make it to both lists.
33
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Result sensitivity to the measures (Rodrik
critics)
3. Policy measure (tariff averages) versus
outcome (import/GDP) measure If only tariff
used globalizersturn out to be the ones that
suffered much greater output collapses in the
early 1980s
34
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Endogeneity of the trade and growth relationship
1. Reverse causation Numerous case studies
(India) highlight that growth precedes trade
liberalization
35
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Endogeneity of the trade and growth relationship
2. Omitted variables
ß2
will be artificially overestimated if
regression omits factor that is positively or
negatively correlated with both trade income
growth Example Positive institutional reforms,
price reforms Negative conflict, drought Proper
estimation of ß2 requires that those factors are
accounted for in the regression time fixed
effects and county fixed effects
(first-differencing) will not do the job
36
Something else .. allowed income increase (in
case of China)
In China price liberalization and
de-collectivization (1980) greatly benefited the
poor. Trade liberalization came after
37
Empirical evidence on trade-growth relationship
Endogeneity of the trade and growth relationship
  • 2. Omitted Variables (contd)
  • The issue of omitted variables is especially
    acute when outcome indicators
  • are used (instead of policy) devoid of policy
    content
  • In simple setting no causal link between trade
    volume and growth but OLS regression would find a
    positive regression coefficient (correlation
    through geography and institutions) Do
    Instrumental Variables (IV)

Dollar and Kraay rely on debatable instruments
since lags of trade volume may explain growth not
only though trade but also though the impact of
past institutions on institutional change.
38
Conclusion1
  • Growing consensus
  • On the need to improve the measurement of trade
    policy to improve the
  • quality of cross-country regression
  • More and more voices to say that possibly the
    average impact of trade
  • policy may not be positive since it is
    conditional
  • depends on the context (growth or recession
    period)
  • depends on the country
  • -specialization
  • -complementary features such as institutions and
    accompanying measures)
  • Greatest impediments to LDCs success in
    international trade markets may not only relate
    to trade policy
  • -exogenous impediments (international protection
    geography)
  • -endogenous barriers that relate to more general
    development problems

39
Endogenous impediments that limit SSA exports
  • labor market policies that induce rigidity and
    prevent labor from moving from less to more
    profitable activities
  • rigidities in markets for land, particularly the
    inability of farmers to obtain full marketable
    title to land, which can prevent investment in
    both human and physical capital in agricultural
    export crops
  • government policies that artificially raise the
    cost of capital
  • domestic price regulation
  • business regulations that impair ease of entry
    and exit
  • government policies that establish or tolerate
    monopolies (other than natural monopolies) or
    business collusion
  • failures of the rule of law, contract
    enforcement, property rights, which impairs all
    economic activity, including exports
  • lack of technical capacity to meet international
    standards such as sanitary and phytosanitary
    standards
  • inadequate infrastructure lack of inland
    transport and inadequate port service for
    exports cost of accessing information to conduct
    transactions
  • protracted domestic civil unrest, which increases
    risk and reduces investment.

40
Exogenous impediments that limit SSA exports
  • A. International barriers imposed by exporting
    countries include
  • high and uneven import tariffs, which distort
    the transmission of
  • international prices to the domestic economy
  • export taxes and prohibitions
  • overvalued exchange rates, which systematically
    make exports artificially
  • expensive and imports artificially inexpensive,
    and generally require foreign exchange rationing
  • export marketing boards that affect relative
    prices and
  • restrictions on foreign direct investment.
  • B. Geographic trade-related impediments that may
    limit SSA exports include
  • land-locked position, which can increase the
    cost of exporting products that
  • can only be efficiently transported by land via
    neighboring countries
  • regional instability or civil unrest in
    neighboring countries and
  • recurring drought, famine, or other
    environmental adversities.
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