Archive for the ‘Preferential Trade’ Category

PTAs and the incidence of antidumping actions

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Preferential trade agreements spur discriminatory anti-dumping practices:

“In this paper we empirically explore the possibility of additional discrimination via PTAs by focusing on the extent to which PTAs alter the pattern of antidumping (AD) activity… AD provisions in PTAs have decreased the number of intra-PTA AD cases by 33-55% and increased the number of AD actions against non-PTA members by 10-30%… PTAs without AD language do not experience any change in AD activity whereas PTAs with AD rules are characterized by protection reduction and protection diversion.”

Just as it’s difficult to assess the net benefits of trade creation minus trade diversion, it’s likely tough to discern the net benefit of PTAs’ AD clauses in terms of protection reduction minus protection diversion.

Did AGOA work? Identification and export incentives

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

The former USTR-Africa who designed the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) preferential trade scheme declares it a “phenomenal success“:

Rosa Whitaker: I think it’s been a phenomenal success. Has it been a panacea for everything in Africa? No, it wasn’t designed to do that. But if you look at the return on the investment, it’s been amazing. It costs the American taxpayer very little – about $2 million a year. In under a decade, exports from AGOA-eligible countries grew over 300% from $21.5 billion in 2000 to $86.1 billion in 2008…

AGOA helped develop an automobile industry in South Africa. In 2000, that industry was exporting about $148 million; it has increased to $1.9 billion in 2008. Car parts exported to the U.S. had an 18-25% tariff. When those tariffs came off for Africa, the assembly part of that manufacturing process moved to South Africa. There are plenty of other examples. Lesotho was exporting $139 million in apparel in 2000; now it’s over $340 million: a 143% increase. Kenya’s cut flower industry expanded from $34 million in 2001 and to exports over $240 million now. Swaziland was exporting $85,000 in jams and jellies in 2000; today it’s $1.6 million. For a small country like Swaziland, that’s important. Then you have Tanzanian coffee and other products. I could go on and on.

Policymakers frequently evaluate programs using this approach — they compare circumstances before and after legislation passed and judge the program based on the difference in outcomes over time. But of course, correlations aren’t very informative about causal relationships.

Economists are interested in the counterfactual — what impact did the program make relative to what would have happened without the program? The most obvious problem with a before-and-after comparison is that steady growth creates improvements over time, regardless of policy changes. For example, Singapore’s Business Times touted that US-Singapore trade had grown nearly 20% since the US-Singapore preferential trade agreement took effect, but US-Malaysia trade grew the very same amount during that period without any US-Malaysia PTA.

Similarly, telling us that African export volumes grew from 2000 to 2008 isn’t very informative, because we naturally expect exports to grow over time as economies grow. (If one wants to suggest that AGOA encouraged greater African openness, the appropriate measure would be the exports-to-GDP ratio.) Identifying the causal impact of AGOA requires a method that distinguishes the increase in exports due to the trade preferences from the counterfactual scenario. (A 300% increase in exports is big, so I’m not suggesting that AGOA necessarily had zero impact. The question is: what share of the increase was due to AGOA?)

In such circumstances, economists often turn to an identification strategy known as “differences in differences“. This involves comparing differences across countries in their differences across time. For example, only some African nations are AGOA-eligible. If African economies receiving preferential tariff treatment from the United States experienced export volume growth that was faster than export volume growth in ineligible economies, we might think that this suggests that AGOA spurred greater exports. However, such a comparison doesn’t constitute valid causal inference in the case of AGOA, because AGOA eligibility was determined according to governance and policy criteria that likely make a difference in economic and export growth. Countries with characteristics making them AGOA-eligible may grow faster than their neighbors due to those characteristics, even without any preferential market access.

Paul Collier and Tony Venables tackled this by taking what is akin to a differences-in-differences-in-differences approach: they looked at the value of a country’s apparel exports to the US relative to its apparel exports to the EU (World Economy, 2007). The thrust of their story is captured by their Figure 1:

Collier & Venables (2007) Figure 1.

Collier & Venables (2007) Figure 1.

African apparel exports to the US increased dramatically faster than such exports to the EU in the early 2000s (even though the EU’s Everything But Arms initiative, which is similar to AGOA, launched in 2001). Collier and Venables also present econometric results in which AGOA apparel eligibility is associated with significantly greater relative exports to the US. A glance at the data on South African automobile exports also suggests that Rosa Whitaker’s story is meaningful in comparative terms: auto exports to the US jumped while exports to the UK and Germany fell slightly.

Period Trade Flow Reporter Partner Code Trade Value
2000 Export South Africa Germany 87
$538,728,295
1
2000 Export South Africa USA 87
$190,767,522
1
2000 Export South Africa United Kingdom 87
$158,073,103
1
2008 Export South Africa USA 87
$1,867,615,402
1
2008 Export South Africa Germany 87
$485,841,841
1
2008 Export South Africa United Kingdom 87
$139,980,048
1

Yet such evidence need not imply that AGOA caused a significant increase in exports by eligible countries. The AGOA trade preferences raised both the incentive to export and the relative incentive to export to the US. It is possible that AGOA-eligible countries would have experienced significant export increases even in the absence of the preferential program and the tariff advantages of AGOA only induced them to direct their sales to the US instead of the EU. Such a claim is compatible with the two pieces of evidence discussed thus far: (1) African exports to the US increased significantly after AGOA came into force and (2) AGOA-eligible economies export more to the US relative to the EU.

Collier and Venables (2007) and Frazer and Van Biesebroeck (2007) address such concerns to some degree. For example, the latter show that:

The impact of AGOA on E.U. imports is in column (6). The effects for most product categories are not significantly different from zero. Perhaps surprisingly, where the effect is significant, it is positive. For example, E.U. imports of GSP-Manufactured products, are found to increase by 4%. A potential explanation (among many) could involve spillover effects from the increased U.S. imports.

Note that though this evidence makes the alternative story about export diversion suggested in my previous paragraph rather unlikely, it cannot completely rule it out (perhaps the relative magnitudes aligned so that the size of the total export increase offset the change in relative shares, leaving exports to the EU constant). This demonstrates one of the difficulties of doing causal inference in a non-experimental setting. We have highly suggestive evidence, but, with enough effort, one can conceive of an alternative explanation.

So was AGOA a success? Probably. Economists have both theoretical reasons to expect it would improve African exports and empirical evidence that suggests that it did. Policymakers and other commentators would be more persuasive if they cited comparisons (in the spirit of Figure 1 from Collier and Venables) rather than just presenting the time series of US imports from Africa – say something like “AGOA-eligible countries’ exports to the US  grew 300% in the last eight years, substantially more than their exports to Europe”. Better (if imperfect) efforts at identifying the counterfactual distinguish the studies analyzing AGOA from meaningless statistics cited in support of other trade policies.

[I've tried to informally convey some ideas about empirical identification issues in the context of AGOA. For a proper introduction to the topic, start with a paper or book that mentions the Rubin causal model, such as Angrist and Pischke's Mostly Harmless Econometrics or Imbens and Wooldridge (JEL, 2009).]

Whither US trade policy?

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Bernard Gordon:

From a US government perspective, the Trans Pacific Partnership is the only game in town. Three main reasons explain why: the state of the WTO’s Doha Round; China’s role in Asia; and America’s self-image of its place in the Pacific. A possible fourth reason is that Washington regards the TPP is the only doable multilateral trade initiative…

For a United States that almost singlehandedly launched both the global GATT and then the WTO, a ‘Trans-Pacific Partnership’ is quite a comedown. All the more so when, if the WTO’s Doha Round were completed, its ‘most favoured nation’ clause would render moot most of the preferential trade agreements now cluttering world trade, and simultaneously kick-start global trade growth. And yet only the unlikely goal of a TPP, so 20th century, will be pressed by the US because that’s all the President is prepared to undertake at this point.

Read the whole thing. (HT: Larry.)

Nsour: Establish an agreement on PTAs

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Mohammad Nsour, who was involved in McGill Law’s PTAs database that I’ve mentioned before, has published his doctoral thesis as Rethinking the World Trade Order: Towards a Better Legal Understanding of the Role of Regionalism in the Multilateral Trade Regime. The publisher’s summary:

Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs) have proliferated at an unprecedented pace since the creation of the World Trade Organization (WTO). Although the WTO legally recognizes countries’ entitlement to form RTAs, neither the WTO nor parties to RTAs have an unequivocal understanding of the relationship between the WTO and RTAs. In other words, the legal controversies, the result of uncertainty regarding the application of the WTO/GATT laws, risk undermining the objectives of the multilateral trade system. This research tackles a phenomenon that is widely believed to be heavily economic and political. It highlights the economic and political aspects of regionalism, but largely concentrates on the legal dimension of regionalism. The main argument of the book is that the first step to achieving harmony between multilateralism and regionalism is the identification of the legal uncertainties that regionalism produces when countries form RTAs without taking into account the substantive and procedural aspect of the applicable WTO/ GATT laws. The book calls for the creation of a legal instrument (i.e. agreement on RTAs) that combines all of the applicable laws on RTAs, and simultaneously clarifies the legal language used therein. Likewise, the WTO should have a proactive role, not merely as a coordinator of RTAs, but as a watchdog for the multilateral system that has the power to prosecute violating RTAs. The author is aware that political concerns are top priorities for governments and policy makers when dealing with regionalism. Hence, legal solutions or proposals are not sufficient to create a better international trade system without the good will of the WTO Members who are, in fact, the players who are striving to craft more regional trade arrangements.

Madagascar’s textile firms lobby for AGOA preferences

Friday, December 18th, 2009

From page 7 of today’s Politico:

Mada_AdBanner_Politico_400

That’s the top of an advertisement paid for by the owners of apparel factories in Madagascar and one of their American investor partners, lobbying the US to extend AGOA preferences for textile exports. 28,000 workers signed the petition.

See Aid Watchers for the full story. Here’s an academic piece on foreign lobbying and US trade policy.

Firms can’t answer the questions we have about PTAs

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Masahiro Kawai and Ganeshan Wignaraja try to use an ADB survey of Asian firms to assess the Asian “noodle bowl” of preferential trade agreements:

Properly designed FTAs keep trade and FDI flowing, even when crisis strikes. Yet, the plethora of overlapping and complex FTAs in East Asia carries the risk of becoming unwieldy and making business cumbersome. Influenced by Jagdish Bhagwati’s famous remark about a spaghetti bowl of FTAs, critics argue that the explosion of deals, with complex rules and variable tariffs, has increased transaction costs, particularly for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) – those that can least afford them (see Bhagwati, 2008 for an excellent synthesis). They also argue that the multiplicity of bilateral and plurilateral deals hinders the broader push toward a global trade agreements. The spaghetti bowl phenomenon is popularly known as the “noodle bowl” effect in Asia and has led Richard Baldwin and Philip Thornton (2008) to propose a “WTO Action Plan on Regionalism” that includes deepening of the transparency mechanism for FTAs.

For the first time, the ADB study on FTAs sought the views of those most directly affected – the region’s export-oriented firms. The results showed that these businesses view FTAs as a benefit rather than a burden and use them to expand trade to a far greater degree than had been previously thought. The benefits of FTAs include wider market access and preferential tariffs that make it easier to import intermediate materials needed for finished goods. Multiple country rules of origin (ROOs), which determine where goods originate from for a variety of purposes, including quotas and labelling, may add some administrative and transaction costs. But the large majority of exporters do not view ROOs as a significant hindrance to business activity. In addition, bilateral and plurilateral FTAs counter protectionist tendencies amid the current economic uncertainty. They provide a valuable stepping stone toward broader trade liberalisation in support of economic recovery.

Unfortunately, this is not compelling evidence. Surveying firms is simply not a persuasive means of assessing the costs and dangers identified by skeptics of preferential trade. Questions about exporters’ preference utilization and perceived trouble with rules of origin cannot answer questions like:

  • Do PTAs dampen protectionist pressures or just shift them onto less-preferred trading partners?
  • Do PTAs divert political energy away from multilateral negotiations – are they building blocks or stumbling blocks?
  • Do these PTAs create more trade than they divert?
  • Will latecomers in the PTA race find themselves forced to join agreements that favor the first movers, through mechanisms such as decisions on technical barriers to trade?

It’s good to collect evidence on preference utilization (28% of firms utilize some preferences, though that’s not as meaningful as evidence on the percentage of trade flows that utilize preference), but this survey doesn’t answer any of the big questions about Asia’s noodle bowl.

The case for preferential trade with Africa

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Karol Boudreaux criticizes Jendayi Frazer for advocating preferential trade with Africa. She writes:

I’m only going to discuss one of her recommendations, which is this: do not extend AGOA trade preferences to a small subset of developing nations that includes some south Asian and some Islamic nations. Ms. Frazer argues: “extending the same trade preferences to hypercompetitive Cambodia and Bangladesh—each of which individually exports more apparel to the U.S. than all of sub-Saharan Africa combined—will undermine the program’s success in Africa.” Here’s a link to the proposed legislation that would expand the trade bill — it’s currently in committee.

But note that the success Ms. Frazer identifies is based on playing favorites. Maybe African producers should be favored over Bangladeshi producers, but on what grounds? A different version of this question would be: “why should African manufacturers be shielded from competition from other developing world producers?”

Boudreaux condemns such preferences as “favoritism” and “protectionism” and argues that more liberal, open trade (combined with better governance) offers the best path for African growth and development. Perhaps. But shouldn’t Boudreaux at least address the respectable economic arguments underpinning the idea that African economies need a foothold to establish nascent industries? Paul Collier and Tony Venables have argued the case for AGOA on such grounds, both in a VoxEU column and in an article in The World Economy.

Africa has lagged behind partly because its economic reforms lagged those of Asia. When export diversification started to boom in Asia in the 1980s, no mainland African country provided a comparable investment climate. Now a number of African cities — Accra, Dakar, Mombassa, Maputo and Dar-es-Salaam, etc. – offer reasonable investment climates, but they cannot compete with Asian cities that have comparable investment climates since the Asian cities have established clusters of firms in the new export sectors. Such clusters provide firms in the cluster with the advantages of shared knowledge, availability of specialist inputs and a developing pool of experienced labour. A classic chicken-and-the-egg problem.

Until African cities can establish such clusters, firms located in Africa face costs that will be above those of Asian competitors, but because costs are currently higher individual firms have no incentive to relocate. If Africa is to diversify its exports and create employment it must develop such efficient clusters of modern sector activity. Where it is feasible, this offers a more reliable development path than the commodity extraction model which Africa has followed to date.

Trade preferences offer a potential solution to the chicken-and-the-egg problem

Boudreaux may be right about the value of trade preferences, but her blog post solely discusses static comparative advantage and competitiveness, whereas industrialization and development is also about dynamic comparative advantage and export diversification.

An African trade bloc

Monday, August 24th, 2009

All Africa:

Preparations to have a free trade zone across Africa’s three economic blocs are in high gear, Juma Mwapachu, the East Africa Community (EAC) Secretary General has said.

The efforts are a result of a tripartite summit held in Kampala last year, where heads of state from the three regional blocs; EAC, Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), and the Southern African Development Community, (SADC) agreed on the expeditious establishment of a free trade bloc.

“We are at the stage where we are about to complete the technical study which will determine what form of free trade area we should have,” Mwapachu told journalists at the just concluded EAC media summit in Kampala.

The study, being conducted by a consultancy firm from the three blocs, will define the institutional arrangements required and a roadmap towards the establishment of the free trade area.

Multilateralizing Regionalism (with a z)

Friday, February 20th, 2009

A behemoth of a book was released by the WTO today – Multilateralizing Regionalism: Challenges for the Global Trading System, edited by Richard Baldwin and Patrick Low, contains the papers and comments from 2007′s WTO conference on Multilateralising Regionalism. Multilateralizing Regionalism should not be confused with Multilateralising Regionalism by Richard Baldwin and Philip Thornton.

WTO launches PTA database

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Watch out McGill! The World Trade Organization just launched its own exhaustive database of preferential trade agreements, in force and under negotiation. Kudos to McGill for doing it first and naming its page the “Preferential Trade Agreements Database,” as the WTO just looks silly when listing  the Canada-Singapore and US-Oman deals as “regional trade agreements.”