Part 1 - Introduction to international trade Flashcards
What type of dimension a trade policy has?
Any trade policy always has an international dimension.
What is a tariff?
a tariff is a tax levied when a good is imported
Are tariff simple or complicated trade policy? Are they used very often? Between what countries is more common used?
Tariffs are the simplest trade policy – are on average quite low nowadays (between developed countries), but their effects are important to understand other trade policies.
What are Non-tariff barriers?
Non-tariff barriers to trade include inter alia import quotas (limitations on the quantity of imports), export restraints (limitations on the quantity of exports), technical regulations and product standards.
What are the different types of trade policy instruments?
Tariffs and Non-tariff barriers
What are export promotion?
A type of trade policy instrument and it is all government’s activities that aim at promoting exports by domestic firms.
Export promotion examples
Export promotion policies include export subsidies, export credit guarantees and export promotion programs.
What is the trade liberalization aim?
Trade liberalization aims at lowering tariff and/or non-tariff barriers, which opens up the economy for trade
Multilateral trade liberalization:
All members of the World Trade Organization WTO (formerly GATT) agree on a new trade agreement that takes effect for all member-countries.
Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs):
All RTA-members (two or more) agree on a new trade agreement that only takes effect for members of the RTA.
Why should we open our economy to international trade?
Stylized empirical facts shows that:
• More open economies tend to grow faster.
• More open economies are richer as measured by GDP pc (per capita).
What are different sources for gains from trade?
- Productivity gains.
- Lower prices.
- More products available.
Is it a good or bad idea to open for trade?
Good idea overall to open for international trade (welfare-enhancing) but do not forget that will always be winners and losers due to trade liberalization
Economic Openness and GDP per Capita graph: how to calculate countries wealth?
GDP / Total number of citizens living in a country = how rich is the country
Relationship between level of openness and GDP
Countries that have always been open as an economy have a higher average GDP (4X richer than countries who were never open)
*Positive relationship - correlation - so it does not means necessarily that opening up will cause a higher GDP per capita
Closed Economies vs Open Economies Graph grow rate per capita (1965-2000)
Closed Economies: No relation between the initial GDP and the average growth rate that succeed later on.
Open Economies: negative relation between the initial GDP per capita and the average growth rate - negative means positive because countries that were initially poorer but were open economies tended to grow faster than countries that were already initially richer - expect conversions of GDP level for economies that are open
Graph on economic openness and GDP per capita:
- Countries that were always open between 1965 to 2000 were, on average, 4.5 times as rich as countries that were never open.
- This indicates a positive relationship (or correlation) between openness and the level of GDP per capita.
Correlation vs causation
Correlation - variable A might influence B and B might influence A and they might influence each other
Causation - variable A causes variable B to change
Three pieces of evidence that being open to the world economy will cause a country to become richer (causation).
- Graphs on economic growth in closed and open economies indicate that average growth in the closed group, 1.5% per year, is significantly lower than in the open group, 3.0% per year, and among open economies, poorer countries grow faster(strong evidence of convergence).
- Historical evidence from countries like Japan, South Korea and Vietnam. (before opened and after)
- Frankel and Romer study (1999) show raising the ratio of trade to GDP by one percentage point raises income by 0.5% to 2.0%, where by authors exploit geographic characteristics (and not trade policy) to identify this effect.
Trade Lessons from Japan:
- Japan is a good example of autarky
* Rapid shift from autarky to free trade from 1859 on (natural experiment)