Citation

Discussion Paper Details

Please find the details for DP6942 in an easy to copy and paste format below:

Full Details   |   Bibliographic Reference

Full Details

Title: Is the Washington Consensus Dead? Growth, Openness, and the Great Liberalization, 1970s-2000s

Author(s): Antoni Estevadeordal and Alan M. Taylor

Publication Date: August 2008

Keyword(s): capital goods, developing countries, GATT, growth, intermediate goods, trade liberalization and Uruguay Round

Programme Area(s): International Macroeconomics

Abstract: According to the Washington Consensus, developing countries? growth would benefit from a reduction in tariffs and other barriers to trade. But a backlash against this view now suggests that trade policies have little or no impact on growth. If "getting policies right" is wrong or infeasible, this leaves only the more tenuous objective of "getting institutions right" (Easterly 2005, Rodrik 2006). However, the empirical basis for judging recent trade reforms is weak. Econometrics are mostly ad hoc; results are typically not judged against models; trade policies are poorly measured (or not measured at all, as when trade volumes are spuriously used); and the most influential studies in the literature are based on pre-1990 experience (which predates the "Great Liberalization" in developing countries which followed the GATT Uruguay Round). We address all of these concerns - by using a model-based analysis which highlights tariffs on capital and intermediate goods; by compiling new disaggregated tariff measures to empirically test the model; and by employing a treatment-and-control empirical analysis of pre- versus post-1990 performance of liberalizing and nonliberalizing countries. We find evidence that a specific treatment, liberalizing tariffs on imported capital and intermediate goods, did lead to faster GDP growth, and by a margin consistent with theory (about 1 percentage point per annum). Endogeneity problems are considered and other observations are consistent with the proposed mechanism: changes to other tariffs, e.g. on consumption goods, though collinear with general tariffs reforms, are more weakly correlated with growth outcomes; and the treatment and control groups display different behavior of investment prices and quantities, and capital flows.

For full details and related downloads, please visit: https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=6942

Bibliographic Reference

Estevadeordal, A and Taylor, A. 2008. 'Is the Washington Consensus Dead? Growth, Openness, and the Great Liberalization, 1970s-2000s'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=6942