Title: South-South%20Trade%20as%20a%20Source%20of%20Developing%20Countries
1South-South Trade as a Source of Developing
Countries Gains
- Nora Dihel (OECD), Przemek Kowalski (OECD) ,
Felix Eschenbach (Sciences Po) and Ben Shepherd
(World Bank) - OECD Global Forum on Trade A trade policy
dialogue on the multiple dimensions of market
access and development - Mexico City, 23-24 October 2006
2Overview
- What is the magnitude and development potential
of South-South trade? - Is South-South trade subject to higher barriers?
- What are the gains from South-South trade?
3South-South Goods Trade Motivation Background
- North-South trade
- Comparative advantage
- Technological spillovers
- Size of Northern markets
- South-South trade
- Economies of scale and product differentiation
- High rates of growth high trade barriers
- Way of breaking into Norths markets for more
advanced products - WTO negotiations
- Aligned along the North-South divide
- Search for derogations from rules and commitments
by some countries in the South - Methodology for modelling South-South goods trade
4South-South Goods Trade econometric results in a
nutshell
- Impact of tariffs and distance most negative for
trade amongst Low and Lower-Middle Income
countries - Policy barriers are more important for
South-South trade than for other trade flows - 10 tariffs decrease 1.6 increase in exports
- Growth in South-South trade over the 1985-2002
period not driven by the death of distance - Geographical distance tends to impact South-South
trade more strongly - 10 distance increase 10 decrease in
North-North trade - 10 distance increase 17 decrease in
South-South trade - Conclusion considerable scope for reductions in
protection and trade costs to bring about further
growth in South-South trade
5Simulation results distribution of welfare gains
form a worldwide removal of tariffs
total US 68 billion
Notation South-North indicates the gains that
originate in liberalisation by the South and
accrue to the North
6Other simulation results
- More than 50 of gains from South-South tariff
liberalisation captured by developing Asia - 68 of the gains from South-South liberalisation
in Asia are realised on a regional basis - Exception China gains more than double as much
from liberalisation of trade with Latin America,
MENA and Sub Saharan countries - In Latin America and Sub Saharan Africa the
regional gains account for 45 and 39 of gains
from South-South trade - Conclusion only a part of gains from South-South
trade could be realised through regional
agreements, mainly in Asia
7Services trade flows the South-South dimension
South-South 36
8Services barriers Trade Restrictiveness Index
Banking
9Impact of removing services barriers on
South-South services trade
- Effect of distance on services trade appears less
strong than for goods trade - Trade in services increases across all sectors
following relaxation of restrictions on foreign
establishments - Same determinants of services trade intensity
apply to South-South and other types of flows
10Impact of services liberalisation on goods exports
- Two-stage link between (i) service sector
openness and performance and (ii) service sector
performance and goods exports - Performance of backbone services sectors
positively associated with total goods exports in
developing countries - The impact of services liberalisation on
performance increases more than proportionally
with the scale of the liberalisation measure - Not enough to liberalise moderately to achieve an
impact on performance if initial degree of
restrictiveness is high
11South-South Services Trade Main Conclusions
- Services trade between developing countries takes
place predominantly at the regional level for all
modes of supply - Barriers for numerous developing countries are
well above the OECD average in banking,
insurance, telecommunication, distribution and
engineering - Little evidence of systematic differences between
South-South and other types of services trade - If services sectors are closed to foreign
competition, the improvement of their performance
requires a major rather than a small or moderate
liberalisation effort
12Thank you!
- przemyslaw.kowalski_at_oecd.org
- nora.dihel_at_oecd.org