Econ 7
Subsidies lower production costs to help producers
1. Compete against foreign imports 2. gain export markets
Tariffs have two purposes
1. Protect domestic goods from foreign competition 2. Produce Revenue for the government
Export Tariffs (less common) but have 2 purposes
1. Raise Revenue for government 2. Political reasons
smoot-hawley Act
1930s aimed at avoiding rising unemployment by protecting domestic industries and diverting consumer demand away from foreign products caused other countries to raise their own tariff barriers
Administrative Trade Policies
buraucratic rules designed to make it difficiult for imports to enter a country
Forms of subsidies
cash grants, low interest loans, tax breaks, government equity participation in domestic firms
Anti Dumping Poiceis
designed to punish foreign firms that engage in dumping - protect domestic producers from unfair foreign competition
local content requirement
developing countries to shift from manufacturing base from the simple assembly to the manufacturing of parts
Import Quota
direct restriction on the quantity of some good that may be imported into a country
Commerce Department and International Trade Commission
domestic producer files petition with either of these if it believes that foreign firm is dumping protection in the US
Urguguay Round
extended GAAT's rules to cover trade in services reduce agriculture subsidies protect intellectual property strengthen GAAT's monitoring and enforcement
Quota Rent
extra profit that producers make when supply is artificially limited by an import quota
Free Trade
gov doesn't try to restrict what its citizens can buy from or sell to another country
strategic trade policy
gov. can help raise national income by ensuring that the domestic firms in an industry gain 1st MA as opposed to forigen ones - adv. for gov. to intervene in an industry by helping domestic firms overcome the barriers to entry that were created by foreign firms with 1st MA
Subsidy
goverment payment to a domestic producer
Krugman and special intrest groups
governments aren't acting with national interest strategic trade policy is captured by special interest groups
Countervailing Duties/antidumping duties
imposed by the two government agencies on offending foreign imports tariff
Specific Tariffs
levied as a fixed charge for each unit of a good imported
Ad valorem tariffs
levied as a proportion of the value of the imported good
Tariff Rate Quota
lower tariff rate is applied to imports within the quote than those over the quota
Economic arguments
protect infant industry strategic trade policy
political arguments for intervention
protect jobs from unfair comeption nationol security reatiliation protecting consumers from unsafe products forgien policy objectives protect human irhgts
Voluntary Export restraint (VER)
quota on trade imposed by the exporting country, typically at the request of the importing country's government
local content requirement
requirement that some specific fraction of a good be purchased domestically can be physically or value terms
Dumping
selling goods in a foreign market at below their costs production or their "fair" market value
Buy American Act
specifies government agencies give preference to American products when putting contracts for equipment out to bid unless the foreign producers have a significant price advantage
Krugman argues
strategic trade policy aimed at establishing domestic firms in a dominant position in a global industry is a beggar-thy neighbor policy that boosts national income at the expense of other countries Strategic trade policy leads to trade war
tariff
tax levied on imports (or exports)