Chapter 15.1 Flashcards
Arguments for trade protection
Infant industry argument
National security
Health, safety and environmental standards
Efforts of a developing country to diversify
Infant industry
A new domestic industry that has not had time to establish itself and achieve efficiencies in production so may be unable to compete with more mature competitor firms from abroad
Diversification
Change involving greater variety
Economically Least Developed Countries (ELDCs)
The group of poorest countries in the world, that are very highly specialized in producing and exporting only a few primary commodities
Questionable arguments for trade protection
Anti-dumping
Unfair competition
Correcting a balance of payment deficits
Tariffs as a source of government revenue
Protection of domestic jobs
Anti-dumping
The argument that a country should have the right to impose tariffs and quotas in order to limit imports of dumped goods
Unfair competition
Practices that countries may use to gain a competitive advantage over other countries in order to unfairly increase their exports at the expense of other countries
Arguments against trade protection
Producers and workers are the only stakeholders who gain from all types of trade protection
Gain of producers has a cost in terms of higher costs of production and reduced efficiency
Consumers lose in most cases
Income distribution in most cases worsens
Foreign producers are worse off
Domestic and global allocation lose
May have negative impacts on price level, real GDP and employment
May have negative effects on a country’s export competitiveness
May give rise to trade wars
Creates a potential for corruption