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Dynamics of Trade and Economic Theory of Trade

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Title: Dynamics of Trade and Economic Theory of Trade


1
Dynamics of Trade and Economic Theory of Trade
  • Shashi Kant
  • Faculty of Forestry
  • University of Toronto

2
Overview of Presentation
  • US Canada Softwood Lumber Trade
  • Global Overview of Forest Industry
  • Conventional Trade Theory
  • Recent Developments in Trade Theory
  • Linkages between Trade Theory and Patterns of
    Forest Products Trade

3
US Canada Softwood Lumber Trade
4
American Consumers for Affordable Homes Four
Powerful Senior House Members Initiate Letter
Urging Bush Compliance with NAFTA, WTO Canadian
Lumber Decisions (Wed, Feb16, 12.49 PM ET)
  • A letter signed by House Rep Whip Roy Blunt
    (R-Mo), House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.),
    House Appropriation Committee Chair, Jim Kolbe
    (R-Ariz), and House Ways and Means Committee
    Member Richard Neal (D- Mass.) cites the
    importance of a reliable supply of lumber for
    domestic housing industry in light of the fact
    that the US cannot provide sufficient quantities
    of the type of wood needed for homebuilding from
    Canada
  • Imposing duties on Canadian lumber is a tax on
    American Homebuyers. the letter says.

5
WTO Sets Panel to Rule on Softwood Lumber Dispute
(Feb 25, 2005, 12.02PM ET)
  • Geneva The WTO set up a panel Friday to decide
    if Canada can apply 4,25b in sanctions against
    the USA in the long-running lumber dispute
    between the two NA neighbors, official said.
  • The second panel, also created Friday, will
    examine whether Washington has complied with an
    earlier ruling that said some U. S. duties on
    Canadian lumber were illegal under international
    trade rules.

6
Minister to Lead Trade Lobbying Effort in U.S.
(Feb 27, 2005, 11.45ET)
  • Washington International Trade Minister Jim
    Peterson is leading a delegation of Canadian MPs,
    provincial officials and business leaders this
    week to lobby key U.S. politicians on major trade
    issues.
  • The group is planning an advocacy day Tuesday on
    Capital Hill that will target influential
    legislators on trade committees in the Senate and
    House of Representatives.
  • The group will reinforce the importance of the
    Canada-U.S trading relationship but also portray
    nagging disputes like the one over softwood
    lumber as costly to jobs, investment and the
    global view of competition in North America.

7
Lumber producers Another strong year thanks to
housing starts (1221 PM, EST Mar 02, ALLAN
SWIFT
  • Despite the softwood lumber dispute with the
    U.S., the Canadian lumber industry is looking
    forward to another good year thanks to the
    ongoing construction boom in North America, the
    chairman of the Canadian Lumbermen's Association
    (Martin Michaud) said Wednesday.
  • "It was a very good year for softwood producers,"
    he said in an interview with The Canadian Press
    during the association's annual convention. "We
    had record prices and a buoyant market."
  • "The only cloud was the countervailing duties
    that are still there after so many positive
    decisions we are still being dealt in an unfair
    way with our neighbours to the south," he said.

8
Lumber producers (cont.)
  • Michaud's comments came as provincial trade
    officials met Wednesday in the Toronto area with
    U.S. Commerce Undersecretary Grant Aldonas. A
    federal trade spokesman said the meeting was
    constructive and was aimed at possibly resuming
    full negotiations to end the softwood dispute.
  • CMHC estimates residential construction in Canada
    will moderate from 2004's 17-year high of 233,431
    new housing units to reach 216,300 starts this
    year and residential construction will continue
    to ease in 2006 with national housing starts
    dipping seven per cent to 201,100 units, as a
    result of higher interest rates and higher
    housing costs.
  • Lumber prices also reached record levels, helping
    to compensate for the duties. The price of
    western construction studs, an industry
    benchmark, was on average 393.35 US per 1,000
    board feet in 2004, according to a spokesman at
    Madison's Canadian Lumber Reporter, an industry
    newsletter. This is well above the average price
    of 269.15 US in 2003.

9
What are Main Issue(s)?
  • Is Factor (Timber) Pricing in Canada main
    issue?ORAre Politics and Relations between
    Industry and Government main issues?
  • Who is benefiting from trade restrictions (CVD
    and AD)?
  • Can the USA design an economic mechanism to its
    own benefit?

10
Factor Pricing in the USA and Canada
  • Timber Pricing
  • Canada
  • Current Pricing System Market Pricing in
    the case of Autarky
  • USA
  • What is the proportional contribution of
    timber from small private woodlot owners (not
    from industry owned forestland) to total timber
    supply of the USA? Are there imperfections in
    the market of standing timber on small private
    woodlot owners?

11
Factor Pricing in the USA and Canada (cont.)
  • USA (cont.)
  • What about sales from government lands (below
    cost sales)?
  • What about timber from industry owned
    forestland?
  • Other Factor (Capital) Pricing
  • The most critical factor for every sector of the
    economy?

12
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14
Who is Benefiting From Trade Restrictions?
  • The main outcome of any trade-restriction (Quota,
    import duties, export duties) increase in
    prices of imported good in the importing
    country.
  • So, who is the loser consumers of importing
    country, and who is the winner producers of the
    importing country.
  • What about the producers of the exporting country
    (depends)?

15
Some Impact Results
  • Myneni et al. (1994) Impact of MOU
    (1982US) the US consumer loss 147.4
    m/yr the US producer gain 109.5 m/yr
  • Wear and Lee (1993) MOU (1982 US) the US
    consumer loss 947.4 m/yr the US producer gain
    658.1 m/yr
  • Lindsay et al. (2000)Both the MOU and SLA
    lumber prices went up by 50-80/MBF, 800 to
    1,300 to the cost of new home, and 300,000
    families being priced out of the housing families
    each year

16
Some Impact Results (cont.)
  • Zhang (2001) SLA (1997 US ), first 4 yearsThe
    average price impact 59/MBF The US producers
    gain 7.7 billionThe Canadian prod gain 2.9
    billionThe US consumers loss12.3 billion
  • Yin and Back (2002)MOU Canadian exports drop by
    10 during 19962 to 20011,pushed US prod, no
    price changeSLA No significant impact on
    Canadian supply, lumber prices, and U.S.
    productionOther factors, such as exchange rates,
    housing starts, and log prices have played major
    roles in shaping the lumber markets.

17
What is the main purpose of trade restrictions?
Probably to reduce the Canadian supply of lumber
in the USA market.
18
Softwood Lumber Export to the USA
19
Why this Outcome?
  • Simple Economic ReasonsThe expected price
    relationship between D S for any good is for
    static conditions.The softwood lumber demand in
    the USA is a derived demand mainly housing
    construction which depends on many other
    economic factors such as Overall economic
    performance Mortgage Rates and Interest
    Rates Exchange rate

20
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21
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22
Housing Starts in the USA (1000 Units)
23
Mortgage Rates in the USA
24
What is the Problem?
  • Simple Non-recognition or non-understanding of
    difference in the Economic Incidence and Legal
    Incidence of Trade Restrictions
  • Simple text book argument In the case of
    perfectly price-inelastic demand total economic
    incidence will be shifted to buyers
  • What is price elasticity of lumber?
  • However, this analysis is also in the case of
    ceteris paribus conditions.
  • Other conditions income, exchange rate,
    mortgage rates, population structure - change

25
Can current duty regime be worse, to the USA,
than quota regime?
  • Why not? Increase in lumber prices No
    decrease in lumber demand/ imports
    ? Duties are Illegal so either return it
    or face counter duties on your
    products? Outcome U.S. Consumers pay
    high prices, and the U.S. and Canadian
    producers gain due to artificially created
    high prices. Does not mean that it will not
    have some losses to Canada, but it may be more
    harmful than the quota system to the USA

26
Can the USA design an economic mechanism to its
own benefit?
  • Probably not given the demand structure of
    softwood lumber in the USA?
  • May be by intervening in the domestic market of
    lumber, Example Japan
  • Or Total Government Control of the LumberMarket

27
Global Overview of Forest Industry
28
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29
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30
Production, Trade Consumption Industrial Round
wood (m m3)
31
Production, Trade, Consumption pulp for paper
(m m3)
32
Production, Trade Consumption Selected
Countries
33
Financial Information by Country/Region (US
million) (PWC, 2004)
34
PWC Top 12 (PWC 2004)
35
Top Two from Different Regions/Countries
36
Canada (US Million) (PWC, 2004)
37
ROCE Leaders (PWC, 2004)
38
Conventional Trade Theory
39
The Ricardian Theory (Mainly Technological
Differences)
  • Single Factor of Production Labor
  • Constant Returns to Scale
  • Technological Differences (in terms of labor
    productivity)
  • Outcome Likelihood of complete specialization
    and gains from trade to all workers in both
    countires

40
The HOV Theorem Factor Endowments
  • Model Two goods, two factors, two countries
    model
  • Assumptions
  • Constant Returns to Scale
  • Preferences in both countries are identical and
    homogenous
  • Fixed supplies of two factors (K L),
    homogenous, and perfectly mobile between
    industries within each country, but perfectly
    immobile between countries
  • No market distortions
  • Goods are identical
  • Countries differ in their relative factor
    endowments

41
The HOV Theorem Factor Endowments
  • The HO Theorem A country will export the
    commodity that intensively uses its relative
    abundant factor.
  • The Factor-price-equalization Theorem Under CRS
    technologies, free trade in commodities will
    equalize relative factor prices through the
    equalization of relative commodity prices, so
    long as both countries produce both goods.
  • The Stopler-Samuelson Theorem Under CRS, and
    production of both goods, a relative increase in
    the price of a commodity will increase the real
    return to the factor used intensively in that
    industry and reduce the real return to the other
    factor.

42
The HOV Theorem Factor Endowments
  • The Rybeznyski Theorem If relative commodity
    prices are constant and if both commodities
    continue to be produced, an increase in the
    supply of a factor will lead to an increase in
    the output of the commodity using that factor
    intensively and a decrease in the output of the
    other commodity.
  • The Factor Content Theorem For an arbitrary but
    equal number of goods and factors, a ranking of
    the content of any factor in net exports divided
    by its content in total output will duplicate the
    ranking of relative factor endowments.

43
The HOV Theorem
  • Problems Almost All the Assumptions
  • Constant Returns to Scale
  • Identical and homogenous preferences
  • Homogenous, and perfectly mobile factors between
    industries within each country, but perfectly
    immobile between countries
  • No market distortions
  • Goods are identical
  • Countries differ in their relative factor
    endowments

44
Developments in Trade Theory
45
The Specific-Factors Model
  • Assumption One factor (K) is specific to
    industry, but other (L) is homogeneous
  • Some Results
  • Presence of specific factors means that they will
    have different prices within the economy.
  • Trade does not equalize factor prices across
    countries.
  • The returns to the specific factors are
    unambiguously related to commodity price changes,
    such is not the case for the return to labor.
  • Any Relevance to Softwood Lumber Trade

46
The Increasing Returns to Scale Model
  • Some Results
  • With IRS, trade and gains from trade can arise
    between two identical (in terms of factor
    endowments) economies (without any comparative
    advantage) Non-comparative Advantage Trade
  • Gains from trade are not necessarily distributed
    evenly, even between identical countries.
  • Strong conclusions about gains from trade are,
    however, impossible to draw because scale
    economies are generally associated with market
    distortions. The result is that a countrys
    prices may not accurately reflect underlying
    costs and the pattern of comparative advantage.
  • Any Relevance to SFL trade

47
Other Determinants of Trade
  • Different Tastes and Diversity of Products
  • Per Capita Income and Non-homogenous Preferences
  • Theories of Trade Based on Life Cycle of New
    Products Life Cycle of New Technologies.

48
Conclusions
  • Linkages between current and future trade of
    forest products and emerging trade theories
  • Where should we go as academicians, policy
    makers, producers?
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