The Political Economy of Trade Policy
The Political Economy of Trade Policy
The Political Economy of Trade Policy
Trade Policy
Government Policies
The Cases for Free Trade
1. Producers and consumers allocate
resources most efficiently when market
prices are not distorted through trade policy.
– With restricted trade, consumers pay higher
prices.
– With restricted trade, distorted prices cause
overproduction either by existing firms producing
more or by too many firms in the industry.
– However, because tariff rates are already low for
most countries, estimated benefits of moving to
free trade are only a small fraction of national
income for most countries.
The Cases for Free Trade
2. Free trade allows firms or industries to
take advantage of economies of scale.
3. Free trade provides competition and
therefore opportunities for innovation.
These dynamic benefits would not be reflected in static
estimates of the elimination of efficiency losses of
producers, caused by distorted prices and
overproduction.
The Cases for Free Trade
4. Free trade is the best feasible political policy,
even though there may be better policies in
principle.
– Any policy that deviates from free trade would be
manipulated by special interests, leading to
decreased national welfare.
The Cases Against Free Trade
1. For a large country, a tariff or quota lowers the
price of imports in world markets and generates
a terms of trade gain.
– This benefit may exceed production and consumption
distortions.
– A small tariff might lead to an increase in national
welfare for a large country. But at some tariff rate, the
national welfare will begin to decrease as the
economic efficiency loss exceeds the terms of trade
gain.
– This argument ignores the likelihood that other
countries may retaliate against large countries by
enacting their own trade restrictions.
The Cases Against Free Trade
2. Domestic market failures may exist that cause free trade to be a
suboptimal policy.
– The economic efficiency of trade calculations assume that markets are
functioning efficiently. But that might not be the case.
– This is a ‘theory of the second best’ argument.
– Types of market failures include:
Persistently high under-employment of labor.
Persistently high under-utilization of capital.
Technological benefits for society from additional production that are not
captured by individual firms.
Environmental costs for society from additional production that are not paid
for by individual firms.
– The counter-arguments:
Domestic market failures should be corrected by a “first-best” policy: a
domestic policy aimed directly at the source of the problem.
The problem of unintended consequences.
Political Models of Trade Policy
How is trade policy determined?
Models that address this question:
1. Median voter theorem
2. Collective action – interest groups theory
Median Voter Theorem
The median voter theorem predicts that democratic
political parties may change their policies to court the
voter in the middle of the ideological spectrum (the
median voter).
Suppose that this ideological spectrum is defined only by
a tariff rate policy.
– And suppose that voters can be ranked according to whether
they desire high or low tariff rates.
– Both parties will offer the same tariff policy to court the median
voter (the voter in the middle of the spectrum) in order to capture
the most votes on either side of the median voter.
– A policy that inflicts large losses on a few people (import-
competing producers) but benefits a large number of people
(consumers) should be enacted into law.
Collective Action
Political activity is often described as a collective action
problem:
– While consumers as a group have an incentive to advocate free
trade, each individual consumer has no incentive because his
benefit is not large compared to the cost and time required to
advocate free trade.
– Policies that impose large losses for society as a whole but small
losses on each individual may therefore not face strong
opposition.
– For those groups who may suffer large losses from free trade
(for example, unemployment), each individual in that group has
a strong incentive to advocate the policy he desires.
Which Industries Are Protected?
Agriculture: in the US, Europe and Japan farmers make
up a small fraction of the electorate but receive generous
subsidies and trade protection.
– European Union’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)
– Japan’s 1000% tariff on imported rice
– America’s sugar quota.
Manufacturing: cars in India and Indonesia, steel in the
US.
Services: banking in many countries, airlines almost
everywhere.
Costs of Protection
Labor Protection
International Trade Negotiations
Since 1944, much of the reduction in tariffs and other
trade restrictions came about through international
negotiations.
– The General Agreement of Tariffs and Trade was begun in
1947 as a provisional international agreement
ITO negotiations in Havana, 1948
– It was replaced by a more formal international institution called
the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995.
Multilateral negotiation mobilize exporters to support free
trade if they believe export markets will expand.
– This support would be lacking in a unilateral push for free trade.
– This support counteracts the support for restricted trade by
import-competing groups.
– Multilateral negotiations also help avoid a trade wars, where each
country enacts trade restrictions even if it is in the interest of all
countries to have free trade
World Trade Organization
The WTO negotiations addresses trade restrictions in
at least 3 ways:
1. Reduction of tariff rates through multilateral
negotiations.
2. Binding: a tariff is “bound” by having the imposing
country agree not to raise it in the future.
3. Prevention of non-tariff barriers: quotas and export
subsidies are changed to tariffs because the costs of
tariff protection are more apparent.
– Exceptions:
subsidies for agricultural exports.
“market disruptions” caused by a surge in imports.
How are trade talks conducted?
World Trade Organization
The WTO was founded on a number of agreements:
– General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
– General Agreement on Tariffs and Services (GATS)
– Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property
(TRIPS)
Trade diversion
– occurs when low cost imports from non-members are diverted to
high cost imports from member nations.