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ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF RULES OF ORIGIN

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Increased interest in FTAs with NAFTA and regionalism in the 1990s ... Adds to the debate on regionalism - multilateralism. Structure of the lecture ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF RULES OF ORIGIN


1
ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF RULES OF ORIGIN
  • Background
  • Free trade areas (FTAs) traditionally seen as
    more trade liberalising than customs unions
  • Rules of origin complex, difficult to analyze
  • Increased interest in FTAs with NAFTA and
    regionalism in the 1990s
  • Research suggests that rules of origin act as
    barriers to trade and affect allocation of
    resources ?
  • FTAs more protectionistic than previously
    thought
  • Adds to the debate on regionalism -
    multilateralism

2
  • Structure of the lecture
  • Why rules of origin?
  • How to determine origin
  • Examples of rules of origin
  • Economic effects of rules of origin
  • Implications
  • Empirical evidence

3
I. Rules of Origin (ROO)
  • To determine where a commodity is produced,
    problem if a commodity produced in more than one
    country
  • Differentiate between
  • Domestic and foreign producers
  • Different foreign producers
  • consumer notification
  • trade statistic purposes
  • trade regulations
  • sanctions
  • preferences

4
  • Preferential Rules of Origin
  • Define the conditions that a product must satisfy
    in order to be considered as originating in a
    country qualified for preferential treatment
  • Customs Unions vs. Free Trade Areas
  • Both CUs and FTAs need rules of origin
  • Additional function in a FTA avoid trade
    deflection

5
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6
II. Methods to determine origin
  • 1. Substantial transformation (the US)
  • If inputs and processes from two or more
    countries, origin to the country where it last
    underwent a substantial transformation
  • Predictable
  • Problems
  • subjective and imprecise
  • difficult to implement at a global level

7
  • 2. Change in tariff heading (CTH)
  • Considered to originate from a country if
    processing enough to change tariff classification
    (Harmonized System)
  • More transparent and predictable, less
    subjective
  • Problems
  • tariff schedules not designed with origin
    determination in mind
  • possible for industries to formulate rules that
    suits their interests
  • requires that classification kept up to date
  • costly

8
  • 3. Value added
  • A certain amount of value must be added to
    imported materials. Often used in combination
    with some other rule
  • Simple and clear
  • Problems
  • difficult to calculate
  • affected by accounting principles
  • a commodity may change country of origin
    unpredictably
  • operations that give origin in one country may
    not do so in another
  • incentives for producers to manipulate prices

9
  • 4. Specified process
  • Technical definition
  • Advantages and problems similar to CTH
  • - risk of manipulation
  • - difficult to have a common system for the
    whole world

10
  • Cumulation
  • Allows producers to import materials from
    certain countries without risk of changing the
    origin
  • bilateral inputs originating from partner
    countries treated as originating in the exporting
    country
  • diagonal inputs originating from another country
    in a specified region treated as originating in
    the exporting country (used in many EU
    agreements, e.g. pan-Euro-Mediterranean
    cumulation zone, not in NAFTA)
  • full basically disregard the origin status of
    the inputs (e.g. EEA and ACP)

11
  • Tolerance Rule
  • allows a certain percentage of non-originating
    materials to be used without affecting origin of
    final product (applies to CTH and specific
    processes)
  • Absorption principle
  • a component that has acquired origin status
    treated as being of domestic origin in further
    processing/transformation (applies to VA)

12
III. ROO in practice
  • All methods used in agreements involving EU and
    NAFTA, often combination of methods
  • detailed and product specific, vary across
    agreements
  • CTH most common
  • EU basically at 4-digit (heading)
  • NAFTA 2-digit (chapter)
  • EUs ROO
  • Replace rules with a single value-added
    requirement
  • Tolerance rule lower for textile and clothing
  • Website http//ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/custo
    ms/index_en.htm

13
IV. Analyzing rules of origin
  • Earlier Domestic content requirements a
    proportionally distributed quota
  • Effects of ROO on resource allocation
  • How producers change their choice of inputs and
    production processes to comply to ROO.
  • If changes from the producer depend on how ROO
    are defined
  • Examples

14
  • ROO in an FTA could extend protection by each
    country to producers in other member countries
  • In general producers of a final good purchase
    more expensive (protected) inputs from another
    member country if effective protection greater
    than in the home country
  • FTAs worse than CUs?
  • Krueger (1995)
  • FTAs can not lead to more trade creation (no
    Single Market as border controls needed)
  • If ROO leads to export protection, FTAs imply
    more trade diversion than under a CU

15
  • V. Implications
  • Policy implications
  • (Content protection protect input markets)
  • Preferential ROO
  • exports protection where high-cost country
    protects its producer in partners market
  • opportunity for domestic producers to lobby for
    protection

16
Other implications
  • Changes opportunities for domestic producers
  • Exaggerated if there are scale economies
  • ROO and developing countries
  • Strict rules to promote value-adding activities
    in developing countries? ?
  • 1) discriminate against small countries
  • 2) makes it more difficult to fragmentize the
    production process

17
VI. Empirical evidence
  • ROO restrict trade
  • Brenton Manchin (2003)
  • 1/3 of EUs imports from GSP that fulfilled ROO
    actually payed reduced duties
  • Anson et al (2004)
  • almost half the value of Mexicos preferential
    access to US market absorbed by administrative
    costs
  • Augier, Gasiorek Lai Tong (2005)
  • cumulation of ROO important in order to avoid
    negative effects of ROO (increase trade approx.
    50)

18
  • VII. Regionalisation and harmonization
  • of ROO
  • Increased numbers of FTA of hub-and-spoke
    character
  • Spaghetti bowls and demand for harmonization
  • EU
  • WTO

19
VIII. Concluding remarks
  • Costs of ROO
  • Administative costs
  • Difficulties in satisfying and veryfing rules ? a
    large part of trade eligible for preference
    treatment do not pay reduced duties
  • Production costs
  • Effects of ROO
  • Protectionism
  • Lower trade volumes, particularly in intermediate
    goods
  • Decreased scope for fragmentation
  • Implications for small and developing countries
  • Despite increase in number of FTA, trade not as
    liberalized as perhaps assumed
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