INTERNATIONAL TRADE LECTURE 12: International Factor Movements.
International Economics Part International trade relations Lecture 2 Why nations trade Lecture 3 The...
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Transcript of International Economics Part International trade relations Lecture 2 Why nations trade Lecture 3 The...
International EconomicsPart International trade Ⅰ
relationsLecture 2 Why nations trade
Lecture 3 The commodity composition of tradeLecture 4 Protection of domestic industries: the tariff
Lecture 5 NTBs to tradeLecture 6 International Mobility of Productive Facto
rs
Feb.15,2011~Jun.10,2011
International Economics
Lecture 5 - Nontariff Barriers (NTBs) to Trade
Feb.15,2011~Jun.10,2011
Syllabus
• Import Quotas• Voluntary Export Restr
aints (VERs)• International Commodit
y Agreements• International Cartels• Local Content Require
ment
• Border Tax Adjustments
• Dumping• Export Subsidies• NTBs versus Tariffs• Strategic Trade Poli
cy?• Summary
1.Import Quotas
• How Common Are Import Quotas?
• Economic Effects of Quotas
• [Tariff and Quota Performance with Demand and Supply Shifts]
Economic Effects of Quotas
• Quota effects: because quota makes the commodity scarce, it raises the goods price in the importing country in a way similar to a tariff.
• The percentage increase in price is the tariff equivalent of a quota.
Figure 5-1 domestic market for cars in a small importing country
[Tariff and Quota Performance with Demand and Supply Shifts]
Figure 5-2 a tariff and a quota when domestic demand rises
More welfare lossMonopoly effect
2. Voluntary Export Restraints (VERs)
• A voluntary export restraint (VER) is an export quota administered by the exporting country.
-----It is also known as a voluntary restraint agreement (VRA).
• VERs are imposed at the request of the importer and are agreed to by the exporter to forestall other trade restrictions.
• A VER is exactly like an import quota where the licenses are assigned to foreign governments and is therefore very costly to the importing country.
• A VER is always more costly to the importing country than a tariff that limits imports by the same amount.
• A VER produces a loss for the importing country.
3.International Commodity Agreements
• An international commodity agreement is an accord between the producing and consuming countries of a commodity to stabilize its price or otherwise interfere with market forces.
• ICAs involve both the producing and the consuming countries
• They take one of three forms Export restriction schemes 2010 coca agreement Buffer stocks 1995 nature rubber agreement Multilateral contracts MFA
Figure 5-3 commodity price stabilization under a buffer stock ICA
4.International Cartels
• An international cartel is a group of corporation located in different countries or a group of governments that agree to restrict trade in a commodity.
• It includes only supplies.
• OPEC is a cartel of the oil exporting countries.
5.Local Content Requirement
• A Local Content Requirement is a regulation that requires that some specified fraction of a final good be produced domestically.
• Local content laws have been widely used by developing countries trying to shift their manufacturing base from assembly back into intermediate goods.
• Border Tax Adjustments consist of a tax on import of a commodity, and a rebate on its export, which equal the domestic indirect taxes.
6.Border Tax Adjustments
• Price discrimination as tactics of firms• Price discrimination: charging different
customers different prices.• Dumping is the most common form of that tactics:
charge a lower price for exported goods than it does for the same goods sold at home market.
• Terms of dumping: ① the industry must be imperfectly competitive ② markets must be segmented
7.Dumping ( Economics of Dumping)
• The purpose of dumping is to maximize the firm’s profit
P,c
MC
Df
DhMR
Ph
Pf
QdQ monopoly
Dumping Leads to larger exports
Maximum Q at Mc=Pf
EXPORT
Dum
ping
• A payment by the government to a firm or individual that ships a good abroad
– When the government offers an export subsidy, shippers will export the good up to the point where the domestic price exceeds the foreign price by the amount of the subsidy.
• It can be either specific or ad valorem
8.Export Subsidies
Effects of an Export Subsidy
S
D
P
Q
PS
PS*
PW
a c de f g
Exports
Subsidy
b
• Non-tariff barriers are more harmful to the national economy than tariffs.
9.NTBs versus Tariffs
• Strategic trade policy consists of government taxes or subsidies designed to increase the global market share of the country’s own oligopolistic firms, so as to increase their oligopoly profit at the expense of foreign firms.
• Brander and Spencer:
in some industries, there are only a few firms in effective competition.
so firms will make excess returns
10.Strategic Trade Policy?
①.the Brander-Spencer analysis: an example
suppose
Øtwo firms from different countries
Øboth are capable of making 150-seat aircraft
Øeach firm can make only a yes/no decision
ØBoeing get a small head start21
Table 5-1 Two-Firm Competition
-5
-5
100 0
00
Airbus
Boeing
Produce
Don’t produce Produce
22
Don’t produce
100
0
Table 5-2 Effects of a Subsidy to Airbus
20
-5 100
0
0
0
Airbus
Boeing
Produce
Don’t produce
Don’t produce Produce
23
1250
②.problems with the Brander-Spencer analysis
make use of the policy would
ØRequire more information
ØRisk foreign retaliation
ØThe domestic politics of trade and industrial policy would prevent use of such subtle analytical tools
Table 5-3 Two-Firm Competition: an Alternative Case
-20
5 125
100 0
0
0
0
Airbus
Boeing
Produce
Don’t produce
Don’t produce Produce
25
Table 5-4 Effects of a Subsidy to Airbus
5
5 125
125 0
0
0
0
Airbus
Boeing
Produce
Don’t produce
Don’t produce Produce
26
11.Summary
• Tariffs and import quotas have many effects in common. Quotas do not automatically provide revenue. Additional differences between a tariff and a quota emerge when supply and demand curves shift.
• Under most conditions quotas are more costly to society than are tariffs.
• VERs have become a widely used instrument for managing trade. They are generally more harmful to society than are tariffs or import quotas with licenses.
• International commodity agreements have not succeeded in stabilizing world prices of primary products.
• The success of international cartels in influencing prices depends on the availability of substitutes and alternative sources of supply.
• Nontariff barriers are widespread, and their economic effects are extremely difficult to calculate.
• Arguments supporting strategic trade policy are intuitively appealing, but implementation of such policies is riddled with many practical problems. Free trade is the preferred policy.
Suggested Further Reading
• R. Baldwin, "Are Economists' Traditional Trade Views Still Valid," Journal of Economic Literature, June 1982, pp. 804-820.
• James A. Brander and Barbara J. Spencer, "International R&D Rivalry and Industrial Strategy," Review of Economic Studies, 50, 1983, pp.707-722.
• Don P. Clark, "Are Poorer Developing Countries the Targets of U.S. Protectionist Actions? " Economic Development and Cultural Change, October 1998, pp. 193-207.