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Because learning changes everything.®
Government
Policy and
International
Trade
Chapter 7
© 2021 McGraw Hill. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom.
No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill.
© McGraw Hill
Learning Objectives
7-1 Identify the policy instruments used by governments to
influence international trade flows.
7-2 Understand why governments sometimes intervene in
international trade.
7-3 Summarize and explain the arguments against
strategic trade policy.
7-4 Describe the development of the world trading system
and the current trade issue.
7-5 Explain the implications for managers of
developments in the world trading system.
© McGraw Hill
Introduction
Free trade occurs when governments do not
attempt to restrict what citizens can buy from
another country or what they can sell to another
country.
• Nations nominally committed to free trade but intervene to
protect interests of politically important groups.
• Modern international trading system is based on General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and the World
Trade Organization (WTO).
© McGraw Hill
Instruments of Trade Policy 1
Tariffs
• Taxes levied on imports.
• Specific tariffs levied as a fixed charge for each unit of imported
good.
• Ad valorem tariffs levied as a proportion of the value of an imported
good.
• Impact:
• Increase government revenues.
• Force consumers to pay more for certain imports.
• Are pro-producer and anti-consumer.
• Reduce the overall efficiency of the world economy.
© McGraw Hill
Instruments of Trade Policy 2
Subsidies
• Government payment to a domestic producer.
1. Cash grants.
2. Low-interest loans.
3. Tax breaks.
4. Government equity participation.
• Help domestic producers compete against foreign imports
and gain export markets.
• Domestic producers gain while consumers typically absorb
the costs.
© McGraw Hill
Instruments of Trade Policy 3
Import Quotas and Voluntary Export Restraints
• Import quotas are direct restrictions on quantity of some
good that may be imported.
• Tariff rate quotas provide a lower tariff rate to imports
within the quota than those over the quota.
• Voluntary export restraint (VER) is a quota on trade
imposed by the exporting country.
• Quota rent refers to the extra profit producers make when
supply is artificially limited by an import quota.
© McGraw Hill
Instruments of Trade Policy 4
Export Tariffs and Bans
• Export tariff is a tax placed on the export of a good.
• Goal is to discriminate against exporting in order to ensure that there
is sufficient supply of a good within a country.
• Export ban is a policy that partially or entirely restricts the
export of a good.
• Example: 1975 ban on U.S. crude oil exports.
© McGraw Hill
Instruments of Trade Policy 5
Local Content Requirements
• Some fraction of a good must be produced locally.
• Expressed in either physical or value terms.
• Protects domestic producers.
• Consumers face higher prices.
Administrative Policies
• Bureaucratic rules designed to make it difficult for imports
to enter a country.
• Hurt consumers by limiting choice.
© McGraw Hill
Instruments of Trade Policy 6
Antidumping Policies
• Dumping occurs when companies sell goods in a foreign
market at below their costs of production or below their
“fair” market value.
• A way to unload excess production.
• Antidumping policies punish foreign firms that engage in
dumping and thereby protect domestic producers from
unfair foreign competition.
• Also known as countervailing duties.
© McGraw Hill
The Case for Government Intervention 1
Political Arguments for Intervention
• Protecting Jobs and Industries.
• Most common political reason for government intervention.
• Critics say claims of unfair competition are overstated for political
reasons.
• Protecting National Security.
• Certain industries, like defense-related ones, must be protected.
© McGraw Hill
The Case for Government Intervention 2
Political Arguments for Intervention continued
• Retaliating.
• Government should use threat of intervention as bargaining tool to
open foreign markets.
• May liberalize trade and result in economic gains.
• Risky strategy.
• Protecting Consumers.
• Protect consumers from unsafe products.
• Indirect effect is limit or ban of imports.
© McGraw Hill
The Case for Government Intervention 3
Political Arguments for Intervention continued
• Furthering Foreign Policy Objectives.
• Government may grant preferential trade terms to a country where it
wants to build strong relations.
• Trade policy can be used to punish “rogue states.”
• Protecting Human Rights.
• Government trade policy used to improve human rights policies of
trading partners.
• Example: apartheid.
© McGraw Hill
The Case for Government Intervention 4
Economic Arguments for Intervention
• The Infant Industry Argument.
• Governments should temporarily support new industries until they
have grown strong enough to meet international competition.
• Support comes through tariffs, import quotas, subsidies.
• Two criticisms:
1. Protection of manufacturing from foreign competition does no good unless the
protection helps make the industry efficient.
2. Assumes firms are unable to make efficient long-term investments by borrowing
money from the domestic or international capital market.
© McGraw Hill
The Case for Government Intervention 5
Economic Arguments for Intervention continued
• Strategic Trade Policy.
• Government can help raise national income when a domestic firm
gains first-mover advantages.
• Might pay for a government to intervene in an industry by helping
domestic firms overcome the barriers to entry created by foreign
firms that have already reaped first-mover advantages.
• Both arguments support government intervention in international
trade.
© McGraw Hill
The Revised Case for Free Trade 1
Retaliation and Trade War
• Krugman – strategic trade policies aimed at establishing
domestic firms in a dominant position in a global industry
boost national income at the expense of other countries.
• These policies will probably provoke retaliation.
• Help establish antidumping policies and rules that minimize trade-
distorting subsidies.
© McGraw Hill
The Revised Case for Free Trade 2
Domestic Policies
• Governments don’t always act in the national interest.
• Interest groups may influence policy.
• Krugman concludes that strategic trade policy is almost
certain to be captured by special-interest groups which will
distort it to their own ends.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 1
Strong economic arguments for unrestricted free
trade.
• Governments unwilling to unilaterally lower trade barriers
for fear others might not follow suit.
• General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT).
• World Trade Organization (WTO).
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 2
From Smith to the Great Depression
• Case for free trade dates to late 18th century work of Adam
Smith and David Ricardo.
• First embraced by Great Britain in 1846.
• Corn Laws.
• Major trading partners did not reciprocate in free trade.
• Smoot-Hawley Act created a wall of tariff barriers against
imports into the United States.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 3
1947 to 1979: GATT, Trade Liberalization, and
Economic Growth
• Following the Great Depression, U.S. embraced free
trade.
• GATT was designed to liberalize trade by eliminating
tariffs, subsidies, import quotas, etc.
• Tariff reduction was spread over eight rounds with great success.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 4
1980 to 1993: Protectionist Trends
• Three reasons for increased protectionism:
• Japan’s perceived protectionist (neo-mercantilist) policies created
intense political pressures in other countries.
• Persistent trade deficits in the U.S.
• Use of non-tariff barriers increased (VERs).
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 5
The Uruguay Round and the World Trade
Organization
• Uruguay Round sought to:
• Extend GATT rules to cover trade in services.
• Develop rules on intellectual property.
• Reduce agricultural subsidies.
• Strengthen GATT’s monitoring and enforcement.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 6
The Uruguay Round and the World Trade
Organization continued
• The World Trade Organization:
• Encompasses GATT and two other groups:
• General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS).
• Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS).
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 7
WTO: Experience to Date
• By 2019, 164 members that account for 98 percent of
world trade.
• Strong early start, but since late 1990s unable to get
agreements to further reduce barriers.
• Limited protectionism returned following global financial
crisis of 2008 to 2009.
• The Brexit vote and election of Donald Trump also suggest
a move toward greater protectionism.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 8
WTO: Experience to Date continued
• WTO as Global Police:
• Enforcement mechanisms appear to be having a positive effect.
• Countries involved have mostly adopted WTO’s recommendations.
• Expanded Trade Agreements:
• Global telecommunication and financial services industries.
• Foreign direct investment.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 9
The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the
Doha Round
• The current agenda of the WTO focuses on:
1. The rise of anti-dumping policies.
2. The high level of protectionism in agriculture.
3. The lack of strong protection for intellectual property rights in many
nations.
4. Continued high tariffs on nonagricultural goods and services in
many nations.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 10
The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the
Doha Round continued
• Antidumping Actions:
• Vague definition of what constitutes “dumping” is a loophole many
countries are exploiting.
• Concentrated in certain sectors: metal industries, chemicals, plastics,
and machinery and electrical equipment.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 11
The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the
Doha Round continued
• Protectionism in Agriculture:
• Tariff rates generally much higher on agricultural products.
• Reflects desire to protect domestic agriculture and traditional farming
communities.
• Net effect is to raise consumer prices.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 12
The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the
Doha Round continued
• Protection of Intellectual Property:
• TRIPS agreement obliges WTO members to grant and enforce
patents lasting at least 20 years and copyrights lasting 50 years.
• Inadequate protections would reduce the incentive for innovation.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 13
The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the
Doha Round continued
• Market Access for Nonagricultural Goods and Services:
• Most developed nations have average tariff rates of under 4 percent
of value.
• Certain imports still have high tariffs, which limits market access and
economic growth.
• Tariffs higher on services than industrial goods.
• WTO goal is to reduce tariff rates to zero.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 14
The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the
Doha Round continued
• A New Round of Talks: Doha.
• Have been ongoing since 2001, currently stalled.
• Agenda includes:
• Cut tariffs on industrial goods and services.
• Phase out subsidies to agricultural producers.
• Reduce barriers to cross-border investment.
• Limit use of antidumping laws.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 15
Multilateral and Bilateral Trade Agreements
• Reciprocal trade agreements between two or more
partners.
• Created in response to failed Doha Round progress.
• Designed to capture gain from trade beyond WTO treaties.
© McGraw Hill
Development of the World Trading System 16
The World Trading System Under Threat
• Two events challenged belief or global consensus to
embrace free trade and lower barriers to cross-border flow
of goods and services.
1. British withdrawal from the European Union.
2. Election of Donald J. Trump.
© McGraw Hill
Focus on Managerial Implications 1
Trade Barriers, Firm Strategy, and Policy Implications
• Why should an international manager care about political economy of
free trade?
• Trade Barriers and Firm Strategy:
• Trade barriers raise the cost of exports which can create a competitive
disadvantage.
• Quotas may limit a firm’s ability to serve a country from locations outside the
country.
• Local content requirements might raise costs.
• Firm might want to locate production activities in another country to reduce
threat of future trade barriers.
© McGraw Hill
Focus on Managerial Implications 2
Trade Barriers, Firm Strategy, and Policy
Implications continued
• Why should an international manager care about political
economy of free trade? continued
• Policy Implications:
• Three drawbacks to government intervention:
• Tends to protect the inefficient rather than help firms become efficient global
competitors.
• Might invite retaliation and trigger a trade war.
• Unlikely to be well executed with the opportunity for it to be captured by special-
interest groups.
Because learning changes everything.®
www.mheducation.com
© 2021 McGraw Hill. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom.
No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill.

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gov policy chapter 7.pdf

  • 1. Because learning changes everything.® Government Policy and International Trade Chapter 7 © 2021 McGraw Hill. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill.
  • 2. © McGraw Hill Learning Objectives 7-1 Identify the policy instruments used by governments to influence international trade flows. 7-2 Understand why governments sometimes intervene in international trade. 7-3 Summarize and explain the arguments against strategic trade policy. 7-4 Describe the development of the world trading system and the current trade issue. 7-5 Explain the implications for managers of developments in the world trading system.
  • 3. © McGraw Hill Introduction Free trade occurs when governments do not attempt to restrict what citizens can buy from another country or what they can sell to another country. • Nations nominally committed to free trade but intervene to protect interests of politically important groups. • Modern international trading system is based on General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and the World Trade Organization (WTO).
  • 4. © McGraw Hill Instruments of Trade Policy 1 Tariffs • Taxes levied on imports. • Specific tariffs levied as a fixed charge for each unit of imported good. • Ad valorem tariffs levied as a proportion of the value of an imported good. • Impact: • Increase government revenues. • Force consumers to pay more for certain imports. • Are pro-producer and anti-consumer. • Reduce the overall efficiency of the world economy.
  • 5. © McGraw Hill Instruments of Trade Policy 2 Subsidies • Government payment to a domestic producer. 1. Cash grants. 2. Low-interest loans. 3. Tax breaks. 4. Government equity participation. • Help domestic producers compete against foreign imports and gain export markets. • Domestic producers gain while consumers typically absorb the costs.
  • 6. © McGraw Hill Instruments of Trade Policy 3 Import Quotas and Voluntary Export Restraints • Import quotas are direct restrictions on quantity of some good that may be imported. • Tariff rate quotas provide a lower tariff rate to imports within the quota than those over the quota. • Voluntary export restraint (VER) is a quota on trade imposed by the exporting country. • Quota rent refers to the extra profit producers make when supply is artificially limited by an import quota.
  • 7. © McGraw Hill Instruments of Trade Policy 4 Export Tariffs and Bans • Export tariff is a tax placed on the export of a good. • Goal is to discriminate against exporting in order to ensure that there is sufficient supply of a good within a country. • Export ban is a policy that partially or entirely restricts the export of a good. • Example: 1975 ban on U.S. crude oil exports.
  • 8. © McGraw Hill Instruments of Trade Policy 5 Local Content Requirements • Some fraction of a good must be produced locally. • Expressed in either physical or value terms. • Protects domestic producers. • Consumers face higher prices. Administrative Policies • Bureaucratic rules designed to make it difficult for imports to enter a country. • Hurt consumers by limiting choice.
  • 9. © McGraw Hill Instruments of Trade Policy 6 Antidumping Policies • Dumping occurs when companies sell goods in a foreign market at below their costs of production or below their “fair” market value. • A way to unload excess production. • Antidumping policies punish foreign firms that engage in dumping and thereby protect domestic producers from unfair foreign competition. • Also known as countervailing duties.
  • 10. © McGraw Hill The Case for Government Intervention 1 Political Arguments for Intervention • Protecting Jobs and Industries. • Most common political reason for government intervention. • Critics say claims of unfair competition are overstated for political reasons. • Protecting National Security. • Certain industries, like defense-related ones, must be protected.
  • 11. © McGraw Hill The Case for Government Intervention 2 Political Arguments for Intervention continued • Retaliating. • Government should use threat of intervention as bargaining tool to open foreign markets. • May liberalize trade and result in economic gains. • Risky strategy. • Protecting Consumers. • Protect consumers from unsafe products. • Indirect effect is limit or ban of imports.
  • 12. © McGraw Hill The Case for Government Intervention 3 Political Arguments for Intervention continued • Furthering Foreign Policy Objectives. • Government may grant preferential trade terms to a country where it wants to build strong relations. • Trade policy can be used to punish “rogue states.” • Protecting Human Rights. • Government trade policy used to improve human rights policies of trading partners. • Example: apartheid.
  • 13. © McGraw Hill The Case for Government Intervention 4 Economic Arguments for Intervention • The Infant Industry Argument. • Governments should temporarily support new industries until they have grown strong enough to meet international competition. • Support comes through tariffs, import quotas, subsidies. • Two criticisms: 1. Protection of manufacturing from foreign competition does no good unless the protection helps make the industry efficient. 2. Assumes firms are unable to make efficient long-term investments by borrowing money from the domestic or international capital market.
  • 14. © McGraw Hill The Case for Government Intervention 5 Economic Arguments for Intervention continued • Strategic Trade Policy. • Government can help raise national income when a domestic firm gains first-mover advantages. • Might pay for a government to intervene in an industry by helping domestic firms overcome the barriers to entry created by foreign firms that have already reaped first-mover advantages. • Both arguments support government intervention in international trade.
  • 15. © McGraw Hill The Revised Case for Free Trade 1 Retaliation and Trade War • Krugman – strategic trade policies aimed at establishing domestic firms in a dominant position in a global industry boost national income at the expense of other countries. • These policies will probably provoke retaliation. • Help establish antidumping policies and rules that minimize trade- distorting subsidies.
  • 16. © McGraw Hill The Revised Case for Free Trade 2 Domestic Policies • Governments don’t always act in the national interest. • Interest groups may influence policy. • Krugman concludes that strategic trade policy is almost certain to be captured by special-interest groups which will distort it to their own ends.
  • 17. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 1 Strong economic arguments for unrestricted free trade. • Governments unwilling to unilaterally lower trade barriers for fear others might not follow suit. • General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). • World Trade Organization (WTO).
  • 18. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 2 From Smith to the Great Depression • Case for free trade dates to late 18th century work of Adam Smith and David Ricardo. • First embraced by Great Britain in 1846. • Corn Laws. • Major trading partners did not reciprocate in free trade. • Smoot-Hawley Act created a wall of tariff barriers against imports into the United States.
  • 19. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 3 1947 to 1979: GATT, Trade Liberalization, and Economic Growth • Following the Great Depression, U.S. embraced free trade. • GATT was designed to liberalize trade by eliminating tariffs, subsidies, import quotas, etc. • Tariff reduction was spread over eight rounds with great success.
  • 20. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 4 1980 to 1993: Protectionist Trends • Three reasons for increased protectionism: • Japan’s perceived protectionist (neo-mercantilist) policies created intense political pressures in other countries. • Persistent trade deficits in the U.S. • Use of non-tariff barriers increased (VERs).
  • 21. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 5 The Uruguay Round and the World Trade Organization • Uruguay Round sought to: • Extend GATT rules to cover trade in services. • Develop rules on intellectual property. • Reduce agricultural subsidies. • Strengthen GATT’s monitoring and enforcement.
  • 22. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 6 The Uruguay Round and the World Trade Organization continued • The World Trade Organization: • Encompasses GATT and two other groups: • General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). • Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS).
  • 23. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 7 WTO: Experience to Date • By 2019, 164 members that account for 98 percent of world trade. • Strong early start, but since late 1990s unable to get agreements to further reduce barriers. • Limited protectionism returned following global financial crisis of 2008 to 2009. • The Brexit vote and election of Donald Trump also suggest a move toward greater protectionism.
  • 24. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 8 WTO: Experience to Date continued • WTO as Global Police: • Enforcement mechanisms appear to be having a positive effect. • Countries involved have mostly adopted WTO’s recommendations. • Expanded Trade Agreements: • Global telecommunication and financial services industries. • Foreign direct investment.
  • 25. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 9 The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the Doha Round • The current agenda of the WTO focuses on: 1. The rise of anti-dumping policies. 2. The high level of protectionism in agriculture. 3. The lack of strong protection for intellectual property rights in many nations. 4. Continued high tariffs on nonagricultural goods and services in many nations.
  • 26. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 10 The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the Doha Round continued • Antidumping Actions: • Vague definition of what constitutes “dumping” is a loophole many countries are exploiting. • Concentrated in certain sectors: metal industries, chemicals, plastics, and machinery and electrical equipment.
  • 27. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 11 The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the Doha Round continued • Protectionism in Agriculture: • Tariff rates generally much higher on agricultural products. • Reflects desire to protect domestic agriculture and traditional farming communities. • Net effect is to raise consumer prices.
  • 28. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 12 The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the Doha Round continued • Protection of Intellectual Property: • TRIPS agreement obliges WTO members to grant and enforce patents lasting at least 20 years and copyrights lasting 50 years. • Inadequate protections would reduce the incentive for innovation.
  • 29. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 13 The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the Doha Round continued • Market Access for Nonagricultural Goods and Services: • Most developed nations have average tariff rates of under 4 percent of value. • Certain imports still have high tariffs, which limits market access and economic growth. • Tariffs higher on services than industrial goods. • WTO goal is to reduce tariff rates to zero.
  • 30. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 14 The Future of the WTO: Unresolved Issues and the Doha Round continued • A New Round of Talks: Doha. • Have been ongoing since 2001, currently stalled. • Agenda includes: • Cut tariffs on industrial goods and services. • Phase out subsidies to agricultural producers. • Reduce barriers to cross-border investment. • Limit use of antidumping laws.
  • 31. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 15 Multilateral and Bilateral Trade Agreements • Reciprocal trade agreements between two or more partners. • Created in response to failed Doha Round progress. • Designed to capture gain from trade beyond WTO treaties.
  • 32. © McGraw Hill Development of the World Trading System 16 The World Trading System Under Threat • Two events challenged belief or global consensus to embrace free trade and lower barriers to cross-border flow of goods and services. 1. British withdrawal from the European Union. 2. Election of Donald J. Trump.
  • 33. © McGraw Hill Focus on Managerial Implications 1 Trade Barriers, Firm Strategy, and Policy Implications • Why should an international manager care about political economy of free trade? • Trade Barriers and Firm Strategy: • Trade barriers raise the cost of exports which can create a competitive disadvantage. • Quotas may limit a firm’s ability to serve a country from locations outside the country. • Local content requirements might raise costs. • Firm might want to locate production activities in another country to reduce threat of future trade barriers.
  • 34. © McGraw Hill Focus on Managerial Implications 2 Trade Barriers, Firm Strategy, and Policy Implications continued • Why should an international manager care about political economy of free trade? continued • Policy Implications: • Three drawbacks to government intervention: • Tends to protect the inefficient rather than help firms become efficient global competitors. • Might invite retaliation and trigger a trade war. • Unlikely to be well executed with the opportunity for it to be captured by special- interest groups.
  • 35. Because learning changes everything.® www.mheducation.com © 2021 McGraw Hill. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill.