Title: Implications of the HO model
 1Implications of the H-O model
-  Factor price equalisation. 
-  With trade international prices converge. 
-  If country A exports cloth because it is 
 labour-intensive and labour is abundant (cheap),
 trade will increase relative price of labour in
 coutry A.
-  If country B exports food because it is 
 land-intensive and land is abundant (cheap),
 trade will increase relative price of land in
 country B.
2And...
-  Biased specialisation. 
-  An increase in the supply of one factor expands 
 production possibilities but in favour of the
 output of the good intensive in that factor.
-  What about Syria. Which factor has increased its 
 supply? What would happen if this supply suddenly
 goes down?
3 International trade theory (II) 
 4Economies of scale
-  Many industries are characterised by increasing 
 returns or economies of scale.
-  Economies of scale may be 
- Internal to the firm. 
-  External to the firm but internal to the 
 industry.
-  Economies of scale can be given by history or 
 accident.
5Imperfect competition
-  Economies of scale usually lead to imperfect 
 competition.
-  A case of imperfect competition is dumping. 
-  A case of dumping is reciprocal dumping two 
 monopolistic firms dump into each others home
 market.
6Intra-industrial trade
-  One-way trade Inter-industrial trade. 
-  Two-way trade intra-industrial trade. 
-  Two-way trade seems good 
-  Larger choice of varieties. 
-  Less strong effect on income distribution.
7Two reasons for two-way trade 
 8One-way trade of selected countries 
 9Some theory for preferential trade
-  Assume three countries with the following costs 
 for wheat
-  US 80US/t, EU 120US/t Morocco 160US/t 
-  Suppose that formerly Morocco applies a 60US/t 
 tariff.
-  Assume that the tariff is phased out on EU 
 imports.
-  Trade deviation the efficient supplier is 
 removed. Significant risk in some cases.
-  Trade creation the partner replacing domestic 
 production. This improves efficiency.
10FDI and regional integration
-  Two strategies for TNCs 
-  Vertical or outsourcing. Needs incentives to 
 attract FDI such as low production costs or
 market access in industrial economies.
-  horizontal or market seeking. Needs large 
 consumer markets. Again this calls for
 South-South integration.
-  Domestic factors 
-  Institutional background and investment climate. 
-  Endowment of human resources. 
-  Presence of efficient local firms. 
-  Fiscal incentives
11 Trade policy interventions 
 12Types of policies with impact on trade 
 13Producer surplus
  14Consumer surplus
  15Analysis of tariffs
-  Tariffs can be specific, ad valorem, or more 
 complex.
-  Basic analysis of the economic impact of 
 tariffs
-  
Small country case 
 16Welfare analysis of the tariff
  17Quotas
-  Quantitative limits. In some cases even 
 voluntary (VER).
-  Prices keep high, like tariffs. 
-  But, there is no tariff revenue a quota-rent 
 appears.
-  License holders get rights to take the 
 quota-rent
-  
-  Transparency is not a quality of the quotas 
-  Isolation from trade intensified.
18An example of VER
Source Procotol 1, annexed to the Euro-Egyptian 
Association Agreement. 
 19Tariff-Rate Quotas (TRQs)
-  TRQs an amount of imports benefitting from 
 lower tariffs.
-  Created with good intentions avoid that 
 tariffication becomes prohibitve.
-  In practice, a great deal of managed trade 
 remains in the TRQs.
20WTO members applying TRQs 
 21Binding tariff levels (averages)
-  Applied tariffs are often lower than the 
 bindings.
-  World average in-quota tariff is 62. 
-  Over-quota tariffs are often prohibitive.
22 Political Economy ofTrade Policies 
 23Why protection?
-  Economic reasons. 
-  Non Economic reasons 
-  Political process 
-  Food Security
24Economic arguments (I)
-  Protection of infant industry. 
-  Market failures 
-  Domestic distorsions in factor markets 
 externalities. Protection leading to second-best
 solutions.
-  Two objections to this argument 
-  Addressing the source of the problems may be 
 more efficient.
-  Responses to protection policies are unknown.
25Economic arguments (II)
-  Protection may improve terms of trade 
-  Optimum tariff. 
-  Contingent protection 
-  Counteract unfair trading actions of other 
 countries.
26Political arguments
-  Industrial countries protect agriculture, at a 
 high cost for their societies. Is democracy
 failing?
-  Public fails to understand the true costs. 
-  Political activities as a public good. The costs 
 for collective action are very high for
 particular individuals (Olsons paradox).
-  Interest groups buy policies. 
-  A negative outcome protection encourages 
 rent-seeking.
27Food Security (FS)
-  FAO definition of FS is based on availability, 
 stability and access.
-  Trade can contribute to improve FS. 
-  But, trade-reliance may bring some problems. 
-  Trade-reliance does not rule out a food 
 self-reliance policy.
-  Self-sufficiency does not solve all FS problems.
28Some basic recommendations
-  Be aware of political factors, 
-  But, there may be alternatives cheaper than the 
 existing policies.
-  And think about the most direct ways of 
 addressing market failures.
-  
29 Domestic policies in an open economy 
 30Decoupling
-  Decoupled policies mean no to encourage farmers 
 incentives to increase yields or production.
-  No measure is fully decoupled. 
-  However, WTO negotiators agreed on a green box 
 with a list of seemingly decoupled measures.
31Buying interventions
-  Market price support by state or parastatal 
 agencies. Examples CCC, FEOGA, ..
-  Gradually eliminated but still important. 
-  High cost of operation how disposing surpluses? 
-  Economic effects are similar to export 
 subsidies, but at a higher cost.
32Direct payments
-  Growing importance in industrial economies 
-  Typical example deficiency payment system. 
-  It is even more costly than intervention buying. 
-  Usually accompanied with supply controls. 
-  Recent moves to further decoupling in the EU and 
 the US
-  1992 CAP reform, 
-  Agenda 2000 
-  US Farm Bill (FB) 1996 
-  A move back? US FB 2001 
33Why do direct payments distort international 
markets?
-  Surpluses tend to increase. 
-  However, budget support is more transparent than 
 intervention buying this makes reform
 politically easier.
34General criticisms on EU and US domestic policies
-  "Intense disappointment" over the 180 billion 
 farm bill (Cairns Group).
-  the new American agriculture policy has created 
 the "most profound" division between Europe and
 the United States (Javier Solana, EU).
-  One of the biggest obstacles to creating vital 
 opportunities for poor farmers (Developing
 countries at the Food Summit.
-  The 15-nation European Union is notorious for 
 giving lavish subsidies to its seven million
 farmers (US authorities).
-  . "We're all free traders and we're all 
 hypocrites (Peter Scher, former trade
 negotiator, Clinton Administration).
35 Measures of protection and support 
 36Measuring protection
-  Protection indicators measure distortions due to 
 trade policy interventions.
-  Some indicators 
-  Nominal Protection Coefficient (NPC) 
-  OECD support estimates (PSE, CSE, TSE) 
-  WTO Aggregate Measure of Support
37Nominal Protection Coefficient
-  Ratio between (average) domestic price and 
 border parity prices.
-  Adjustments are needed by transport and 
 marketing costs to make comparison possible at
 the same spot.
-  NPC can be adjusted by exchange rate (ER) 
 distortions
- Gross NPC (or simply NPC). Official ER. 
-  Net NPC border prices are converted by 
 equilibrium or shadow ER.
38Producer Support Estimate (PSE)
-  Gross transfers from consumers and taxpayers to 
 support agricultural producers arising from
 agricultural policies.
-  Two types of components 
-  Market Price Support (MPS) Price gap x 
 Total production
-  Other transfers from taxpayers to producers 
-  Net of feed costs. 
-  Percentage PSE
39General Services Support Estimate
-  Transfers to general services provided to 
 agriculture collectively.
-  GSSE represents transfers that are not received 
 by producers individually, and do not affect farm
 revenues.
-  Examples 
-  Agricultural training and extension. 
-  Improvement of off-farm collective 
 infrastructures.
-  Depreciation of Public storage. 
40Consumer Support Estimate (CSE)
-  gross transfers to (from) consumers of 
 agricultural commodities, arising from policy
 measures which support agriculture.
-  Includes MPS  Transfers from consumers to the 
 budget and quota-rents.
-  But it is net of 
-  transfers from taxpayers 
-  excess feed cost MPS on crops used in animal 
 feeding.
41Total Support Estimate (TSE)
-  All transfers from taxpayers and consumers 
 arising from agricultural policies, net of
 budgetary receipts.
-  Including 
-  Transfers from consumers to producers  
-  Transfers from taxpayers to producers  
-  Transfers from taxpayers to general services  
-  Transfers from taxpayers to consumers 
-  Also TSE  PSE  GSSE  transfers from taxpayers 
 to consumers.
-  Also TSE  transfers from consumers  transfers 
 from taxpayers - import receipts (or
 renta-quotas).
42A particular case MPS  consumer subsidies 
 43WTO Aggregate Measure of Support
-  Indicator used in WTO negotiations 
- AMS is different from the PSE. The AMS 
-  excludes green box and blue box 
-  only defines MPS when administered prices exist. 
-  uses fixed reference (international) prices. 
-  ignores negative transfers. Also, de minimis 
 clause.
-  Does not adjust for excess feed costs.
44Selected topics 
 45Allocation of import quotas. The banana case
-  1993 Creation of the Single Market in the EU 
 need for a common import regime.
-  Two tariff quota 
-  For traditional ACP countries (preference) 
-  For Latin America and non-traditional ACP. 
-  Traditional operators of domestic banana and ACP 
 suppliers were allocated 30 percent of licenses
 for importing from Latin America.
-  The banana Framework Agreement 
-  The panel. Towards a tariff-only regime.
46Tariff escalation (TE) 
-  Low tariffs on intermediate goods and high 
 tariffs on final product.
-  Increases effective protection of value added. 
-  Encourages final goods. 
-  In industrial economies, TE difficulties export 
 diversification of developing countries.
-  In developing countries textile case.
47Variable tariffs the entry prices
-  Ideally, tariffs should be constant and 
 predictable.
-  Entry price applies to some fruit and vegetables 
 and seasons and.
-  Additional tariffs when import value undercuts 
 the entry prices.
-  Administrative problems Importers tend to 
 declared higher CIF prices than the entry prices.
-  Possible co-ordination in the exporting country 
 for increasing export prices.
48Rules of origin (ROO) making preferences complex
-  FTAs needs ROO 
-  Products adquire origin with sufficient 
 transformation
-  What is sufficient transformation? 
-  Bilateral cumulation. 
-  Problems with ROO 
-  Administrative costs 
-  Possible trade diversion 
-  Hub and spoke trade 
-  Easing the ROO diagonal cumulation.