Title: Richard E. Baldwin
1- Read Chapter 9 only up to (but not including)
section Income Distribution Trade Policy WHAT
IS LEFT OUT? - Political economy models (median voter, etc.)
interesting but will be covered more in depth in
the trade policy formation week. (might want to
read it out of personal interest) - Discussion of trade negotiations is quite shallow
compared to what you have and will learn. - Preferential trading agreements is likewise too
light youll have a whole week on regionalism.
2Arguments for Free Trade
- Economic Perspective
- Political Perspective
3Pro-FT Efficiency Perspective
- Reverse of cost/benefit analysis of a tariff.
- Free trade eliminates deadweight losses
associated with tariff reverses any ToT effects.
4The naïve case for free trade
- FT efficiency
- Small nations unambiguously gain from removing
tariffs - e.g. Hong Kong Singapore have basically zero
tariffs. - Basis of naïve statement by some Unilateral
liberalisation is always good - Econ professors love this example since it is
unambiguous and requires no sophisticated
reasoning.
5Less naïve case for free trade via MTNs
- The ToT gain for Home is matched exactly by the
ToT loss for Foreign. - But both Home and Foreign experience DWL.
- THUS, matching tariffs is lose-lose situation
- Suppose another market where Home exports and
Foreign imposes T. - If Home and Foreign impose tariffs on each others
exports (then ToT gains/losses cancel out), then
both removing them at same time will make both
nations better off by the amt of the DWL.
6MTNs passing parade parable
- Coordination failures Nash eqa (Econ View)
- Each nation might lose if unilateral
liberalisation, but team-work liberalisation
avoids ToT losses. - Juggernaut theory of trade liberalisation
(Pol.Econ.View) - MTNs solve the internal political dilemma of
liberalisation. - Reciprocity gt Exporters become free-traders in
pursuit of better foreign mkt access. - MTN liberalisation changes economic landscape and
thus relative political power of pro-trade
anti-trade grps.
7Econ Arg (contd) Dynamic GFT
- The so-called static efficiency gains (the
triangles and rectangles) are multiplied by other
gains such as increased economies of scale, and
pro-investment effects these knock-on effects
often called dynamic GFT. - Main examples
- Scale Pro-Competitive Effects
- By creating large markets, FT allows better
exploitation of IRS while simultaneously boosting
competition. - CC-PP diagram analysis fundamental
scale-vs-competition trade off. - Pro-investment effects
- Working these out can be complex, but basic idea
is simple. - Requires consideration of economics of growth
(not hard but ) - Improved static efficiency improves a nations
investment climate, so more investment gets done. - The initial static GFT is multiplied by
trade-induced investment-led growth - Liberalisation improves economic efficiency since
market forces allowed to work more freely. This
extra efficiency makes the nation a more
attractive place to invest. Extra human, physical
and knowledge capital formation gets done. - Main idea is to improve investment climate FT
may help. - These are usually included in the CGE analyses of
trade liberalisation.
8Pro-FT Political Perspective
- Perspective Protection is a way of allocating
resources in the economy, i.e. influencing
production and distn of welfare. - Markets are imperfect so there may be an economic
argument for protection, but politicians are also
imperfect, so the question is - Which is more imperfect? Politically/bureaucratica
lly chosen import prices, or market chosen? - Corruption and import protection.
- Internal/world price wedge invites smuggling,
fraud, etc. - Protection allows govt officials to allocate
quota rents /or prodr surp. gains. - Overt corruption (some nations) or legitimate
corruption that is
9Pro-FT Political Perspective (contd)
- Even without overt corruption, political system
chooses trade policy via legitimate corruption - Lobbying Campaign contributions perspective
- One vote one person (democracy), meets one dollar
on vote (the market). - Powerful special interest groups often manage to
get govts to adopt policies that help the few and
the harm the many. - Trade policy often has regressive impact on
income distn. - Poor people spend higher fraction of income on
consumption. - e.g. in rich nations, imports goods include food
clothing. - Many recipients of US EU farm aid are rich
- Clothing workers are poor in rich nations, but
firm owners are rich and take most of benefit
from protection since wages set by external
factors, e.g. mkt forces (US UK), or labour mkt
institutions (EU) - Interest grps often use populist arguments play
on voter ignorance.
10Pro-FT Political Perspective (contd)
- Perspective Market as a good governance tool.
- Market-based prices in a reasonable competitive
setting reflect costs of production and
benefits of consumption. - Many, many people involved no one dominates
- 1 dollar 1 vote
- Relying on market prices is a way of gathering
vast quantities of information without temptation
to distort it - To make pet projects look good.
- To make favoured ideology or politician look
good, etc. - Example Export-oriented development strategy
might work by reducing the worst abuses export
success provides measure of performance that
cannot be fully controlled by the firms being
evaluated.
11Pro-FT Political Perspective (contd)
- Interesting Perspective Free Market as a good
governance tool. - If govt does intervene in the market, do so in as
broad a fashion as possible. - Support ALL industry, or all firms in a sector
picking choosing opens door to manipulation,
corruption, etc. - If support cluster, do so for any/all entrants
dont pick winners losers. - In trade, suggests a uniform tariff
- e.g. 0 on all capital goods, 20 on all
industrial goods, 30 on all consumer goods. - Trade-off restrain political/bureaucratic
abuse/mistakes, but doesnt optimise on economic
grounds. - May lead to a less imperfect outcome than picking
choosing.
12Anti-FT
- Naïve ToT argument. optimal tariff argument
- A country can improve welfare if foreign nations
do not retaliate. - Recall PE analysis.
- A nation always gains if tariff is sufficiently
small. - Argument almost never used on import side
- Exception US oil import fee argument (not
accepted). - Often used on export side (commodity cartels,
OPEC, etc.) - Justifies Govt marketing boards
- Essentially a form a govt sanctioned collusion to
raise price of exports.
13Arguments against FT
- Domestic market failures
- Since mkts are imperfect, mkt production level
may not be socially optimal. - D-curve gives the margl priv. benefit of
production. - Social benefit may be higher than this
externalities - Logic in words should be clear
- If public vs private benefit diverge, the free
market wont allocate resources in an efficient
manner. - This opens the door to a logically valid reason
for govt intervention on efficiency grounds - Must carefully evaluate particular situation to
know if intervention is warranted.
14Arguments against FT
- Domestic market failures
- Same point with a diagram.
- Bottom panel shows the private-public marginal
benefit gap. - Protection that raises output to S2 will have
extra gains for area C. - In this case, tariff may raise welfare, despite
the DWL.
15Arguments against FT
- This is one aspect of infant industry argument
- External economies spillovers mean worth to
nation of extra production exceeds private worth,
so should encourage it. - Many industries claim positive spillovers
externalities. - Figures never lie, but liars always figure.
- Even with a valid spillovers argument, protection
may not be the best response. That is
16Counter-arguments Dom.Distortions
- Theory of the second best
- Protection is almost never the best govt
intervention - it is too blunt.
- Tariff taxes consumption and subsidies
production, but usually govts goal is only to do
one - Usually promote production is the goal.
- Counter example Anti-consumption import policy,
e.g. luxury items. - First-best response is to directly subsidise the
activity where the externality occurs, or tax
consumption govt wants to discourage. - In words
- A tariff equal to T euro per unit is exactly the
same as a consumption tax of T euro per unit AND
a production subsidy of T euro per unit. - But usually govt only want to promote production,
so why also tax consumers? - To see this in the PE diagram see slides at end
of lecture.
17Counter-arguments Pigouvian taxes subsidies
- The full, ideal govt answer is
- Pigouvian taxes subsidies scheme
- In words Remove the wedge between
private-vs-social benefit of consumption
production with taxes or subsidies. - The market price reflects the private marginal
benefit (pMargl Utility) - If we add a subsidy that reflects the social
margianal benefit, then the with-subsidy price
reflects full benefit to society. - Private, competitive firms will produce the right
amt.
18Pigouvian taxes subsidies
- In diagram
- S is the standard supply curve, i.e. the MC
curve. - The social S-cur includes the spillover
(assumed here to be positive, so social is below
private). - If govt gives production subsidy to firms to
bring private S-curve down to social m.c. curve,
then private firms produce the socially optimal
amount.
Producer price
Home demand curve
Social S-curve
S
True marginal Social cost to Nation private MC
Soc. Marg Benefit (spillover)
Pw
quantity
Q2
Q3
Q5
19Pigouvian taxes subsidies
- Problems and practice
- In real world, govt has hard time finding
information on exact size of all the spillovers,
so very few set industry or sector specific
subsidies, however - Many govt take rough-and-ready approach e.g.
give all manufactures a tax break, subsidize all
RD, make all public education free, provide free
govt services to help firms, etc. - General policies allow some intervention while
reducing info costs opportunities for
corruption/special interest influence. - NB this approach explains why govt have a
perfectly legitimate reason for some subsidies. - Justifies the WTOs boxes approach.
- Youll learn much, much more about boxes next
semester.
20Counter-arguments
- A nice way to summarize the point
- Specificity Principle
- Put the bandage where the cut is
- Protection tends to be adopted over domestic
policies simply because public fails to
understand the true costs of protection. - Industry likes protection Production subsidy
with auto-financing tax perfect for industry a
2 for 1 package!
21National Defense Argument
- Argues that a particular industry is vital to a
nations security because of its products or the
skills it develops. - Extreme form of the domestic distortion
argument. - If trade permitted in industry, foreign imports
will dominate, driving Home producers out or
reduce size of Home industry. - During war, normal trade may be disrupted,
cutting off imports. - Without adequate supplies, Home country national
security threatened. - With tariff protection, industry will remain
large enough to avoid threat in event of
emergency or war. - Problems
- Not easy to identify industries vital to
security. (Food in Switzerland?) - Other policies may have lower welfare costs for
nation as a whole such as stockpiling goods or
production subsidy to domestic firms. - Costs then borne by all consumers rather than
consumers of single good.
22Market Failure Arguments for Protection
23Infant Industry Argument
- May be a valid argument for enhancing total world
welfare. - Relies on Economies of Scale (IRS) in particular
industry. - Must evaluate each case carefully.
- Argument Assume growth of new industry inhibited
by low-cost imports from foreign country. - Temporary protection to domestic industry would
allow it to realize IRS, become low cost producer
to world. - Recall the Thai-v-Swiss watch example.
- Import Tariff means consumers finance the
expansion of the industry but they also reap LR
benefits of lower price. - Theoretically valid if there are capital market
imperfections, or external economies but - difficult to identify industries in practice.
- Many such industries are set up by private firms
in rich-nations (no borrowing constraint), e.g.
micro-machine technologies, bio-tech, GMOs, etc. - Empirical evidence does not find many instances
of success. - Alternative Policies to achieve Goal?
- Specificity Principle Subsidy to domestic
industry by govt has lower welfare cost.
24Save jobs in specific industries
- Special interests often argue for protection to
save jobs in a particular industry. - US steel sector, EU footwear sector, Japanese
rice sector. - The cost per job saved (i.e. avoiding the
worker having to switch industries) can be high
25Costs of Protecting U.S. Jobs, 1990
Source Hufbauer Elliot, Measuring Costs of
Protection in the U.S., 1994
26 27Tariffconsn tax prodn subsidy
- Optional diagram
- Spose no tariff, but subsidy tax T.
- Border price Pw.
- Tax shifts down D-curve for any given conss
level. - Subsidy shifts down the S-curve for any given
prodn level.
Producer price
Home supply curve
Home demand curve
S w/Subsidy
PwT
Pw
quantity
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
28Tariffconsn tax prodn subsidy
- Positive effects exactly like a tariff.
- Same consn
- Same prodn
Producer price
Home supply curve
Home demand curve
S w/Subsidy
PwT
Pw
quantity
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
29Tariffconsn tax prodn subsidy
- Welfare effects exactly like a tariff.
- ?CS (use old D-cur since this shows M.U.)
- ? by ABCD
- ?PS (use old S-cur since this shows M.C.)
- ? by A
- Tax revenue ABC
- Subsidy cost AB
- Net gain in revenue C.
- Net loss DWL triangles BD.
Producer price
Home supply curve
Home demand curve
S w/Subsidy
PwT
A
C
B
D
Pw
quantity
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5
30prodn subsidy alone
- ?CS 0. Consn at Q5.
- ?PS ? by A.
- Subsidy cost AB
- Net welfare effect -B, i.e. only the production
distn. - Cd add in the externality as before with a
diagram below.
Producer price
Home supply curve
Home demand curve
S w/Subsidy
PwT
A
C
B
D
Pw
quantity
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q5