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Trade
and Exchange Rate Policies
Smugglers: the
invisible hand?
A real exchange rate devaluation is frequently
advocated as a means to improve the trade balance. By reducing the
relative price of domestic output, such a policy tends to encourage
consumers to switch from imported to home goods and firms to switch from
production for the domestic market to export. This prescription assumes
that there is a high degree of substitutability among final goods in
consumption and among inputs into production: elasticities of import
demand and export supply with respect to the real exchange rate must be
high. In Discussion Paper No. 161, Research Fellows William Branson
and Jorge de Macedo argue that these assumptions may be
inappropriate in some LDCs, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. Most
imports are intermediate inputs (such as oil) and capital equipment. The
structure of production processes is determined by the existing capital
stock: this limits opportunities for substitution and reduces the
short-run price elasticity of the demand for imports. In addition
African countries' exports are often dominated by agricultural output,
whose supply is inelastic in the short run.
In this situation a real devaluation will not be appropriate: it will
tend to expand export revenues and import receipts in proportion to
their initial values in home currency, while leaving them unchanged in
foreign exchange. If the trade balance is initially in deficit, the real
devaluation may thus increase the deficit, in terms of home currency,
deflating domestic demand with little gain in foreign exchange.
Devaluation may not work, but maintaining a fixed nominal exchange rate
in the face of domestic inflation may also be counter-productive,
Branson and de Macedo argue. Such a policy tends to cause an
appreciation of the real exchange rate (the relative price of home- and
foreign-produced goods) and shrinking exports. To prevent an erosion of
the trade balance, import duties and export subsidies must rise at an
increasing rate in order to offset the increasing divergence between the
prices of non-traded and traded goods, caused by domestic inflation.
This illustrates the dilemma faced by LDCs that attempt to fix nominal
exchange rates in the face of domestic inflation: higher export
subsidies increase incentives to falsify sales as exports in order to
obtain the subsidy, and higher import tariffs increase incentives to
import illegally. The escalation of trade barriers therefore
generates a rising black market premium and offers increasing incentives
to smuggling. This is already a pervasive problem in many African
countries. As a consequence, the central bank finds it more and more
difficult to hold the nominal exchange rate constant. The authors
analyse data from Sudan which, they argue, suggests that attempts to
stabilize the nominal exchange rate, rather than matching movements in
the nominal exchange rate to relative inflation, sharply destabilized
the real effective exchange rate after 1980. This discouraged investment
in the traded goods sector and provided increasing incentives for
illegal activity.
Branson and de Macedo analyse an alternative: a passive exchange rate
policy of stabilizing the real exchange rate by adjusting the nominal
rate in line with domestic inflation. This 'insulates' the traded goods
sector from domestic inflation, since the home currency price of imports
and exports rises at the rate of inflation, and avoids a profit squeeze
in these sectors. Unless such a passive policy is accompanied by the
elimination of trade barriers, however, the black market premium will
not disappear. An importer will tend to smuggle if the tariff is so high
that it pays to purchase foreign exchange in the black market at a
premium. It is therefore necessary to operate consistent exchange rate
and trade policies, which set tariffs at a level that creates a long-run
black market premium consistent with balanced legal and illegal
trade. If this consistency of policies is not achieved, the black market
may offset the effects of official exchange rate policy.
In Discussion Paper No. 162, Jorge de Macedo constructs a more
detailed model of the relationship between trade taxes, smuggling and
black markets in foreign exchange. The behaviour of importers and
exporters, and their choice between legal trade and smuggling, is the
basis of de Macedo's analysis. Smuggled imports are paid for with black
market foreign exchange obtained from undetected smuggled exports: the
behaviour of importers and exporters thus determines both the black
market premium and the ratios of smuggled to legal exports and imports.
De Macedo first analyses the choice between legal and illegal trade, for
a given black market premium: importers and exporters choose their mix
of smuggling and legal trade by equating marginal revenue to marginal
cost in both activities. Since smuggled imports must be paid for with
black market foreign exchange, importers' choices between smuggling and
legal trade depend not only on the level of the import tariff and the
probability of detection, but also on the black market premium. The
ratio of domestic to world prices and the ratio of smuggling to legal
trade will thus be determined simultaneously, in the light of the levels
of trade taxes and the black market premium. De Macedo demonstrates
that, if the probability of successful smuggling is determined within
the model, the import price mark- up will lie between the tariff factor
(one plus the tariff rate) and the black market premium, and the export
price mark-up will lie between the premium and the export tax factor.
De Macedo extends the model to allow for the interaction between the
foreign exchange black market and smuggling. An increase in the export
tax increases the supply of black market foreign exchange: the premium
falls but both smuggling ratios still rise. Thus higher trade taxes
induce smuggling, but their effect on the black market premium depends
on whether they affect supply or demand on the black market.
De Macedo then combines his model of the black market premium and the
shares of smuggled imports and exports with a model of the economy as a
whole, which explains total legal and illegal imports and exports,
production and consumption of traded and non-traded goods, and welfare.
He shows that, even when trade is balanced, the existence of a black
market premium and a non- traded goods sector makes it possible that the
imposition of trade taxes may cause consumption to rise due to induced
smuggling: trade taxes need not therefore reduce welfare.
Smugglers' Blues at the Central Bank:
Lessons from Sudan
William H Branson and Jorge Braga de Macedo
Currency Inconvertibility, Trade
Taxes and Smuggling
Jorge Braga de Macedo
Discussion Papers Nos. 161 and 162
March 1987 (IM/IT)
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