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Tariffs
and Quotas
Remeasuring protection
Despite the extensive literature devoted to measuring the `cost of
protection', or the welfare loss caused by trade restrictions relative
to free trade, traditional indices may be misleading. For example, the
trade-weighted average tariff typically falls with the elimination of
trade in a commodity as its trade weight falls to zero. In Discussion
Paper No. 683, James E Anderson and Research Fellow J Peter
Neary instead propose a `Trade Restrictiveness Index'; this has a
firmer basis in welfare economics and measures the degree of
restrictiveness of a system of trade protection.
When only tariffs restrict trade, this Index is equal to the uniform
tariff that has the same effect on aggregate welfare as the existing
tariff system. Changes in the Index therefore affect economic welfare
normalized by the total welfare effect of the initial tariff system,
which should allow consistent comparisons of changes in the Trade
Restrictiveness Index across countries and time. Where only quotas
restrict trade, the Trade Restrictiveness Index equals the
equiproportionate reduction in permitted import volumes that is welfare
equivalent to the initial structure of quotas. When both quotas and
tariffs restrict trade, the index equals the equiproportionate increase
in tariffs and reduction in quota levels yielding the welfare of the
initial system of trade restrictions; such goods should be viewed as
quota constrained, with the tariff merely ensuring that some rents
accrue to the importing country.
Anderson and Neary then illustrate some empirical short-cuts that may be
used to estimate changes in their Trade Restrictiveness Index. If the
protected goods are separable in a general equilibrium sense, this
provides a rigorous foundation for partial equilibrium analysis; the
Trade Restrictiveness Index can also be adapted to allow for different
forms of rent-sharing and countries' abilities to influence their terms
of trade. Measuring their index for exports of textiles and clothing
from Hong Kong to the US, which face binding quotas under the Multi-Fibre
Arrangement, they find that restrictiveness increased for both sides
during 1982-8. Increased restrictiveness need not imply quotas were
tightened, however: if there is overall economic growth, constant or
even rising import quotas may imply tightening of the protective system.
Finally, Anderson and Neary compare their results with those based on
the trade-weighted average of the `tariff equivalents' and find that the
two measures have opposite implications for trade restrictiveness in
two-thirds of the observations in their case-study. They conclude that
their own measure is empirically operational.
A New Approach to Evaluating Trade Policy
James E Anderson and J Peter Neary
Discussion Paper No. 683, June 1992 (IT)
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