Protectionism: Trade Barriers

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Protectionism: Trade Barriers Every year there is some version of this on the test

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Protectionism: Trade Barriers. Every year there is some version of this on the test . FREE TRADE or PROTECTIONISM?. Free trade = no trade barriers Trade is allowed to be conducted w/o any restrictions Absence of artificial barriers (government imposed) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Protectionism: Trade Barriers

Page 1: Protectionism: Trade Barriers

Protectionism:Trade Barriers

Every year there is some version of this on the test

Page 2: Protectionism: Trade Barriers

FREE TRADE or PROTECTIONISM?

Free trade = no trade barriersTrade is allowed to be conducted w/o any restrictionsAbsence of artificial barriers (government imposed)

Protectionism = imposing trade barriers to protect the income of domestic producers

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Overview of Types of Protectionism

Direct forms of Protectionism

EmbargoTariffsQuotasubsidies

Alternative forms of Protectionism

VERExchange ControlsImport LicensesAdministrative Barriers

• Health and safety• environmental

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Complete Free TradeDue to comparative advantage, imports flow in at P2, as foreign merchants can undercut domestic production.

Pric

e

Quantity

P1,domestic

Q1

D

S domestic

1

Pt. 2 trade benefits consumers because prices are lower (fromp1 to p2) and they have more goods available, Q0 to Qw.

Domestic producers lose because they sellless, A to Q0 and at a lower price, p2 insteadOf p1.

S world 2

P2, world

WA0

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Embargo: Total ban or lack of tradeMay be self-imposed by a domestic government

Self-imposed embargos on illegal drugs, endangered animals etc

Imposed from outside for political or military reasons.Most effective when country can’t produce embargoed goods by themselves, or at a very high cost.

Pric

e

Quantity

P

Q1

D

S domestic

1

Pt. 1 is equilibriumfor domestically produced goods.

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Tariff: tax on importsad valorem

A tax on a good whose amount depends on the value of the good or service, eg. 15% sales tax

Pric

e

Quantity

P2

P1

Q1

D

S domestic

S world

TariffP3

C WA

S

B0

1

2

45

3

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Tariff - Domestic ImpactProducers benefit- A to B and those producing at 0 to A get higher price (0P3 rather than 0P2) Consumers lose- higher prices at P3 and fewer goods at C rather than W.Government gains

Pric

e

Quantity

P2

P1

Q0

D

S domestic

S world

Tariff

Gov. Revenue

P3

C WA

S

B0

1

2

4443

5

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CountryTariffs as a % of

Government Revenue

U.K. 0.1%Japan 1.2U.S. 1.5

Costa Rica 16.1Ghana 31.2

Dominican Republic

44.2

Lesotho 55.1

Tariffs as a percentage of total government revenue

Source: World Bank

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Quotas- A physical limit on the amount of goods which may be imported in a set period of time

Pric

e

Quantity

P2

P1

Q0

D

S domestic

S world

Equilibrium with quota

P3

C Qw

Quota

Equilibrium with freetrade. At P2

0 A B

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Quota- Domestic ImpactProducer Benefits – Better than free trade but not as good as an embargo Consumer Result – Increased P but decrease Q compared to free trade but lower P and higher Q than without free trade.

Pric

e

Quantity

P2

P1

Q0

D

S domestic

S world

Equilibrium with quota at P2 the free trade allows certain goods in up to the max of B and then no more M allowed so supply =Sd

P3

C Qw

Quota

Equilibrium with freetrade. At P20 A B

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Subsidies – applied to domestic goods to make them cheaper and more competitive with imports.

Pric

e

Quantity

P1

P

Q0

D

S domestic

S domestic w/subsidy

P2

C Qw

2 S world

0

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Subsidies – Domestic Impact Domestic producers – this decreases costs for domestic producers so they can compete with imports.Consumers – pay same p as with free trade and receive same Q

Pric

e

Quantity

P1

P

Q0

D

S domestic

S domestic w/subsidy

P2

C Qw

2 S world

0

0-Q0 produceddomestically

Q0-QW imported

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Alternative Forms of Protection Voluntary Export Restraints (VER)

Exporting country agrees to a voluntary quota of exports into a second country

Exchange ControlsGovernment limits amount of foreign currency available to importers, or citizens traveling abroad, or companies investing abroad

Import LicensingForm of rationing where the importer must obtain a license, or permission to import

Administrative BarriersSafety, health or environmental requirementsOther forms of “red-tape” obstacles

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Arguments for Protectionism

Military self-sufficientInfant Industry

Protect developing industry in LDCs

Declining IndustriesAllow firms a period of protection

Protecting EmploymentAnti-Dumping

Dumping: product exported at a price below production costs

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Arguments Against Protectionism

HIGHER PRICES

Poor Resource Allocation

What else? (see text)

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IndustryCost to Consumers

Per Job Saved

Autos $105,000

Color TVs 420,000

Motorcycles 150,000

Athletic Footwear 30,000

Apparel 37,000

Specialty Steel 1,000,000

Glassware 200,000

Sugar 60,000

Ball Bearings 90,000

Costs of protecting U.S. jobs from foreign competition

Source: Coughlin, et al. (1988) and Hufbauer, et al. 1986.

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Effect of tariffs and quotas on imports, domestic production, and prices

•PW is the world price—that is, the price of the good that world be established in a global market without trade barriers.

•Pd is the domestic price—that is, the price in the domestic market if imports were equal to zero.

•Qd is the domestic output of a good if imports are zero.

•T is a tariff (measured in dollars, yen, lira, peseta’s, etc.) per unit, ton, pound, etc.

•Pq is the domestic price under the imposition of a quota.

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Figure 8.8a: Effect of an embargo on Japanese watches

(a)

12.50

$15.00

Price

Quantity of Digital Watches252015

E

U.S. importsD

U.S. supply

U.S. demand

A

B C

•World price is $12.50

•Embargo pushes price paid by domestic buyers to $15.00

•Loss of CS = BDEA

•CDE is the “dead weight loss (welfare loss)”

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effect of a tariff on oranges

0

Price ($)

Quantity (tons)

D

S

PW

PW + T

Pd

Free trade imports

Imports with tariff

q1 q5q4qdq2

•Domestic production increases from q1 to q2.

•The domestic price of oranges increases.

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effect of a Quota on oranges

0

Price ($)

Quantity (tons)

D

S

PW

Pq

PdImport quota = 100 tons

100 400300250200

•Domestic production increases from 100 to 200 tons..

•The domestic price of oranges increases.

Free trade imports = 300 tons

S + Quota