International Economics NYU Spring '24
ad valorem tariff
ad valorem tariff is expressed as a fixed percentage of the value of the imported product. primarily used with manufactured goods because it can be applied to products with range of grade variations, maintains constant degree of protection for domestic producers through the business cycle
maintenance of the domestic standard of living
advocates of trade barriers often contend tariffs are useful in maintaining high levels of income and unemployment in home nation
tariff-rate quota
allows specified number of goods to be imported at a lower tariff rate (within quota rate). Any imports above this level face higher tariff rate (the over-quota rate)
outsourcing
competitive strategy for producers, each production stage located in country where it incurs least cost
social regulations
correct a variety of undesirable side effects markets ignore like health, safety, environment
consumption effect
decrease in consumption resulting from tariff's artificially increasing price
when firm's average costs decrease as industry's output increases, the cost reduction could be caused by
decrease in resource prices or the amount of resources per unit
customs valuation
determining value of imported product is complex, subject to disagreement
consumer surplus
difference between what buyers are willing and able to pay and the amount they actually pay, so inverse relationship between change in market price and CS
producer surplus
difference between what producers are willing and able to receive and the amount they actually receive, direct relationship between change in price and PS
effect of resource endowments on comparative advantage
differences in relative resource endowments, differences in relative resource prices, differences in relative product prices
Increase in tariff falls on
domestic consumer
fairness in trade: a level playing field
domestic producers say import restrictions need to offset foreign advantages to create level playing field, rationale for restrictions is that foreign governments play by different rules, giving foreign firms unfair competitive advantage, trade benefits domestic economy even if foreign nations impose trade restrictions, and fair trade argument overlooks potential impact of trade restrictions on global trade
export subsidy
domestic production subsidy is granted to producers of import-competing goods, an export subsidy goes to producers of goods to be sold overseas, for both, net price received by producer equals price paid by purchases plus subsidy, and subsidy revenue is redistributed in form of producer surplus.
foreign market value price based definition
dumping occurs when foreign firm sells good at price in US below home price
gains from trade for US significantly determined by
dynamic balance between its rate of technological innovation and rate of technological diffusion to other countries
effective rate
e=(n-ab)/(1-a) where n=nominal tariff rate on final product, a=ratio of value of imported value to value of finished product, and b=nominal tariff rate on imported input
Should average variable cost be yardstick for defining dumping?
economists argue that fair value should be based on average variable cost rather than average total costs, especially when domestic economy experiences temporary downturns in demand, under competitive conditions, firms price goods at average variable cost, antidumping laws punish competitive behavior, US firms selling at home not subject to same rules
tariff evasion
evading tariffs by illegal means such as smuggling imported goods into a country
policy implications of stolper-samuelson theory
even though free trade may provide overall gains for a country, there are winners and losers. owners of abundant resources tend to favor free trade while owners of scarce factors tend to favor trade restrictions
inter-industry trade
exchange between nations of products of different industries based on inter-industry specialization and each nation specializes in industries in which it enjoys comparative advantage
why do small countries have higher measures of openness
exports are significantly tied to international trade
stolper-samuelson theory
extension of factor-price equalization theory. export of product that embodies large amounts of relatively cheap, abundant resource makes resource scarcer, driving up its price/income. import of product that embodies large amounts of relatively expensive, scarce resource makes resource less scarce driving down its price/income. thus, the increase in the income to each country's abundant resource comes at the expense of the scarce resource's income
economies of scale
factors that cause a producer's average cost per unit to fall as output rises. Exit when expansion of the scale of production capacity of a firm or industry causes total production costs to increase less proportionately than output
sporadic dumping
firm disposes of excess inventories in foreign markets by selling at price below domestic price
specific tariff
fixed amount of money per physical unit of imported product, relatively easy to apply and administer, degree of protection varies inversely with changes in import prices, and provides domestic producers increased protection during recession
Should antidumping laws reflect currency fluctuations?
foreign producers often must set their prices for foreign customers in terms of a foreign currency, fluctuations in exchange rates can cause them to dump according to legal definition, under US antidumping law, American firms are not required to meet the standard imposed on foreign firms selling in the US
free trade
free trade argument posits that open markets foster most efficient use of world resources, policies often meet resistance among companies and workers who face losses in income and jobs because of import competition, and policymakers torn between global efficiency and needs of voting public
revenue tariff
generates tax revenues by placing tariffs on either imports or exports, many developing nations rely on tariffs as major source of income
persistent dumping
goes on indefinitely; to maximize economic profits, a producer may consistently sell abroad at lower price than at home
All aspects of a nation's economy are linked to economies of trading parters through international movements of
goods and services, labor, business enterprise, investment funds, and technology
import licenses
government allocates import licenses to importers, permitting them to import product only up to prescribed limit, regardless of market demand
dynamic comparative advantage
government can establish policies to promote opportunities for change through time, comparative advantage in particular industry can be created through mobilization of skilled labor, technology, and capital
job protection argument
job gains less visible than job losses, trade restrictions result in job gains for a few industries, job losses are spread out, saved jobs cost more than workers' salary
Trend of labor and capital in US in recent decades
labor mobility has not risen, increasingly tied to the rest of the world through capital flows, foreign ownership of US financial assets increasing, concerns over rising cost of debt, international branches of US banks, US securities increasingly globalized
tariff avoidance
legal use of tariff system to company's advantage to reduce the amount of tariff payable by legal means
openness in the US economy 1890-WW2
less open, reduced dependence on trade
antidumping duty
levied (in addition to normal tariff)when US Department of Commerce determines foreign merchandise is being sold at less than fair value and US International Trade Commission determines that these imports are causing or threatening material injury to domestic industry
costs society pays as result of protectionism
loss of consumer surplus because of higher prices, resulting deadweight losses, lost economies of scale as further opportunities are lost, loss of incentive for technological development provided by import competition
protective effect of domestic
loss to domestic economy from wasted resources used to produce at increasing unit costs
protection against cheap foreign labor
low wages abroad makes it hard for US firms to compete with firms using cheap foreign labor, fails to recognize links among efficiency, wages, and production costs, as low wages do not guarantee low costs, and low wage nations have competitive advantage only in goods requiring greater labor and few other factor inputs
manufactured goods stages
manufactured goods is introduced to home market, domestic industry shows export strength, foreign production begins, domestic industry loses competitive advantage, import competition begins
optimal tariff
maximizes positive difference between gain of improving terms of trade and loss in economic efficiency from the protective effect and consumption effect. only beneficial to importing nation
import quotas
may lead to domestic monopoly of production and higher prices
Risks of withdrawing from free-trade agreements such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership
may place America at competitive disadvantage as other countries form trade pacts with each other, resulting in rising tariffs on American exports that dampen sales abroad. Detracts from America's role as a leader in international cooperation making it harder to achieve agreements on the environment, immigration, and national security
to limit outsourcing, labor lobbied for domestic content requirements
minimum percentage of a good's value must be produced locally to qualify for zero tariff rates, pressure domestic/foreign firms to use domestic inputs/workers, can result in higher input and product prices and loss of competitiveness, subsidizes by domestic consumers
product life cycle theory
nations differ in rates of technological innovations, result in new methods of producing existing commodities, production of new commodities, and commodity improvements
Economic interdependence
no nation exists in economic isolation
Do import restrictions result in more jobs for domestic workers?
no, a reduction in imports does not occur in isolation. Jobs promoted by import barriers tend to be offset by jobs lost from falling exports
Threat of imports
not all workers gain from international trade, some jobs are lost to cheap imports, concerns over mass immigration for low-wage work, particular threat to unskilled workers in developed countries
global quota
permits specified quantity of goods imported each year; does not specify from where product is shipped or who imports, plagued by accusations of favoritism
absolute quota
physical restriction on quantity of goods imported during a specific time period
nontariff barriers
policies other than tariffs that restrict international trade, best-known is the import quota which limits the total quantity of goods that may enter a country within a given time period
Effects of tariff on import
prices increase for domestic consumers, quantity demanded decreases, effect shared between domestic consumers, who pay higher price, and foreign producers, who receive lower price than under free trade
allocating quota licenses methods
pro-rata basis: US importers receive a fraction of their demand equal to the ratio of the import quota to the total quantity demanded collectively by US importers auction import licenses to the highest bidder in a competitive market
globalization
process of greater interdependence between countries and their citizens and increased interaction of product and resource markets via trade, immigration, and foreign investment. Includes noneconomic elements (ideas, culture, environment)
tariff escalation
processed goods have higher import tariffs, raw materials often imported at zero or low tariff rates, and nominal and effective protection increases at each production stage
international price discrimination
producer charges higher price at home and lower price overseas, submarkets' demand conditions must differ(different demand elasticities between home/foreign), firm must be able to separate submarkets (prevents arbitrage, resale of goods at higher price), markets are easier to separate internationally (higher transport costs, trade restrictions)
predatory dumping
producer temporarily reduces price charged abroad to drive foreign competitors out of business
advantages of globalization
productivity increases faster when countries produce goods and services in which they have a comparative advantage, living standards can increase more rapidly, global competition and cheap imports keep a constraint on prices so inflation is less likely to disrupt economic growth, open economy promotes technological development and innovation with fresh ideas from abroad which promotes economic growth and more jobs, jobs in export industries typically pay up to 18% more than jobs in import-competing industries, unfettered capital movements provide the US access to foreign investment and maintain low interest rates
industrial policy
promote industrial policy in order to achieve comparative advantage in certain industries, a strategy to revitalize improve and develop an industry (encourage development of emerging sunrise industries, and direct resources to industries in which productivity is highest, linkages to the rest of the economy are strong, and future competitiveness is important)
national security argument
protect essential industries (cultural and sociological considerations). assumption that national and individual's welfare enhanced by tariffs
bias in the political system favors
protectionism
deadweight loss
protective effect and consumption effect combined
Protective tariff
protects domestic producers from foreign competition and facilitates increase in output of import-competing producers
internal economies of scale
provide additional cost incentives for specialization in production. countries will specialize in products that have a large domestic demand. expansion of the firm itself, lower long run average cost, efficiencies from larger scale production, range of economies e.g. technical and financial
offshore assembly provision
provides favorable treatment to products assembled abroad from US made components, incentivizes foreign manufacturers to purchase components from US sources
nominal tariff rate
rate published in country's tariff schedule and applied to value of finished product
Openness in the US economy late 1800s
relatively high, rise in world trade
Corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) standards
represent foundation of US energy-conservation policy, by 2026 passenger cars are required to reach 54.5 miles per gallon and light trucks 40.3 miles per gallon
1933 Buy American Act
requires federal agencies to purchase materials and products from US suppliers if prices not unreasonably higher than foreign, domestic product must be 50% domestic component content and be manufactured in US. In 2021, most end products and construction materials increased to 55%. Iron and steel, domestic content threshold set at 95%
openness
rough measure of the importance of international trade in a nation's economy. Sum of nation's exports and imports as a percentage of its GDP
equalization of production costs
scientific tariff to eliminate unfair competition from abroad. Problems: - different costs across business - higher domestic prices which benefit efficient domestic companies but domestic consumer subsidizes inefficient production -approximates prohibitive tariff which contradicts comparative advantage and eliminates basis/gains for/from trade
higher costs of protection, the less likely a government is to
shield an industry from import competition
domestic production subsidy
subsidies may take form of outright cash disbursements, tax concessions, insurance arrangements, and subsidized loans. results in higher output, redistributive efforts-increase in producer surplus for most efficient producers, deadweight loss-protective effect, lower welfare losses than a tariff/quota, financed by taxpayers
antidumping laws
supporters claim such laws are needed to ensure level playing field by offsetting artificial sources of competitive advantage, critics note that although protected industries gain, consumers ose more and economy as whole therefore suffers net loss
free on board valuation
tariff applied to product's value as it leaves exporting country
regressive tariffs
tariffs are inequitable, impost most severe costs on low-income families, higher tariffs imposed on cheap goods than on luxuries, affect different countries in different ways, tend to burden poorer countries that specialize in production and sale of cheaper goods
export tariff
tax imposed on an exported product, less common, illegal under US constitution, commonly used by developing nations
import tariff
tax levied on imported product, most common, and collected before shipment can be unloaded in domestic port
tariff
tax levied on product when it crosses national boundaries
cost insurance freight valuation
taxies levied as percentage of imported commodity's total value upon arrival at final destination
What forces drive globalization?
technological change in transport, information, and communications; liberalization of trade and investment; development of international financial markets
risks of levying tariffs to protect American manufacturing jobs at particular firms
the few jobs that are saved come at a high cost to domestic consumers
Why do large countries have lower measures of openness
they are less reliant on international trade, companies can attain optimal production size without having to export due to the population and economic size
would a tariff wall really protect US jobs
trade protectionism was a political priority in 2016 presidential election. tariffs on imported steel tend to have a positive, direct effect on jobs for American steel workers, bur can have less visible, indirect effects on others. tariff-related gains for Americans is a complex issue
factor-price equalization
trade redirects demand away from relatively expensive, scarce resource toward relatively cheap, abundant resource in each nation. (cheap resource becomes relatively more expensive, expensive resource becomes relatively cheaper, and eventually factor price equalization as globalization evens things out but no full factor price equalization exists in the real world
risks of restricting imports from particular countries in an attempt to decrease bilateral trade deficits
trading partners may retaliate. reductions in bilateral trade deficits are not a good indicator of economic development
redistributive effect
transfer of consumer surplus to domestic producers
intra-industry trade
two way trade in a similar commodity, emphasized by advanced industrial nations, existence of intra-industry trade incompatibly with models of comparative advantage
bonded warehouse
under US tariff law, dutiable imports can be brought into US and temporarily left in a bonded warehouse, duty free up to 5 years, owners of warehouses must be bonded to ensure they will satisfy all customs duty obligations, and bonding company guarantees payment of custom duties if importing company unable to do so, when goods removed from warehouse firm must pay duty on value at time of removal
foreign market value cost based definition
used when price based definition cannot be applied, commerce department constructs a foreign market value
risks of violating rules of the World Trade Organization to protect American interests
weakens the rules-based trading system that many countries rely on to settle trade disputes and maintain open markets
What is a small nation?
when a nation is so small it can not influence the price of the product it buys, and when they import a very small portion of world market supply and are unable to impact market price.
when can tariffs increase national welfare
when imposed by importing nation large enough that changes in its quantity of imports influence world price
managerial economies of scale
when you have larger corporations it becomes harder to manage them and you need more people
government regulations
workplace safety, product safety, clean environment all improve well being of the public but result in higher costs for domestic firms
the economy is ___ with the introduction of tariffs
worse off
First wave of globalization
1870-1914. technological advances in steam engine, telegraph, electricity internal combustion engine led by Great Britain. Initially free trade but rising protectionism. Free capital movements and free migration
Second wave of globalization
1944-1980. Technological advancements in container shipping, jet planes, communication satellites, and television led by US. Gradually decreasing tariffs, regulated capital movements, and regulated migration
Third wave of globalization
1980-present. Advances in personal computers, internet, and mobile phones led by multipolar (US, EU, China). Freer trade spreading followed by rising protectionism, free capital movements, and regulated migration
protectionism
Economic policy of shielding an economy from imports.
who benefits in free trade biased sector
Exporting producers, their workers, and their suppliers
Risks of US participating in trade war with continuous rounds of escalating tariffs
Harms American exports and both countries suffer when volume of trade falls. Trade wars create uncertainty for businesses, which causes investment spending to fall, lessening the economy's ability to grow
What is the threat of imports to unskilled workers in developed countries
Hurts these workers in import-competing industries, wages increase for skilled workers, workers are more production, but imports do not decrease the total jobs in nation
theory of overlapping demands
Nations with similar per capita incomes will have overlapping demand structures and will likely consume similar types of manufactured goods; wealthy nations will likely trade with other wealthy nations, and poor nations will likely trade with other poor nations
capital movements
Purchase and sales of foreign and domestic bonds and stocks
external economies of scale
The cost benefits that all firms in the industry can enjoy when the industry expands. expansion of the industry, benefits most/all firms, agglomeration economies are important, helps to explain rapid growth of many cities
ricardian theory
a country exports that commodity in which it has a comparative labor productivity advantage. assumes relative labor productivity, labor costs, product prices differ in countries before trade.
disadvantages of globalization
americans have lost jobs because of imports or shifts in production abroad and most find new jobs that pay less, americans that operate in import-competing industries fear getting laid off, workers face demands of wage concessions from their employers who often threaten to export jobs abroad if wage concessions are not accepted, besides blue collar jobs, service jobs and white collar jobs are increasingly vulnerable to operations being sent overseas, american employees can lose their competitiveness when companies build state of the art factories in low wage countries, making them as productive as those in the US
margin of dumping
amount by which foreign market value exceeds US price
compound tariff
applied to manufactured products composed of raw materials that are subject to tariffs specific portion of the duty neutralizes the cost disadvantage of domestic manufactures that results from tariff protection granted to domestic suppliers of raw material, and ad valorem portion of the duty grants protection to the finished goods industry
foreign trade zone (FTZ)
area in US where businesses operate without paying duties on imported products or materials as long as they remain in area and do not enter US marketplace, in an FTZ, can do just about anything to merchandise (repair, repackage, assembly), FTZ program treats a product manufactured in FTZ as if it were imported, not made in US, customs duties are due when goods are transferred from FTZ for US consumption
tariff effects
as taxes on imports, tariffs make items more expensive for consumers, reducing demand, buyers pay more for US made goods than they would for imported goods under free trade, job loss in retail and transportation sectors that import foreign-made goods, job loss in any domestic industry that suffers retaliatory tariffs, and additional costs of inputs passed on to consumers through goods and services that use such inputs in production process
agglomeration economies
benefits an enterprise/business enjoys because they are close to other businesses
Principle of comparative advantage in trade
both partners can benefit from trade
revenue effect
government's collections of duty
export quotas
governments enter as form of voluntary export restraint agreements. moderate intensity of international competition; tend to be more costly than tariffs. identical effect to equivalent import quotas; except implement by exporting nation. in 1980s, 67% of costs to US consumers of these restraints captured by foreign exporters as profit
effects of export subsidy
higher output and prices for exporters so higher exports and lower domestic consumption, domestic producers gain at expense of domestic consumers and taxpayers, leading to decrease in CS, increase in PS, and taxpayers bear cost of export subsidy
effects of import tariffs on exporters
higher production costs from imported inputs and reduction in CS, can result in higher prices and depending on elasticity of demand, reduce overseas sales, raise cost of living, international repercussions lead to reductions in domestic exports
High degree of economic interdependence reflects
historical evolution of economic and political orders and increasing integration into activities of foreign countries
license of demand allocation on tariff-rate quotas
if demand for licenses is less than quota, system operates on first come, first serve basis. if demand exceeds quota, import volume requested is reduced proportionally among all applicants. allocation may also be based on historical market share or auctions
free-trade argument
if each nation produces what it does best and permits trade in long term, there will be lower prices and higher levels of output, income, and consumption, tariffs and other trade barriers are viewed as tools that prevent the economy from undergoing adjustment, resulting in economic stagnation
Heckscher-ohlin theory/factor endowment theory
immediate basis for trade is difference between pre-trade relative product prices of trading nations. Explains why labor abundant countries export labor-intensive products such as textiles and why capital abundant countries would export aircraft and machinery. Doesn't explain why 2-way trade widely exists and why wealthy countries that have similar endowments trade more intensively with those with dissimilar endowments
who benefits in protection biased sector
import competing producers, labor unions in protected industry, suppliers of producers in protected industry, established firms in aging industry that could lose comparative advantage
selective quota
import quota allocated to specific countries, may lead to domestic monopoly of production and higher prices
effective tariff rate
include nominal tariff on finished good and any tariff implied to imported units if tariff on finished product is less than tariff on imported input, effective rate of protection is less than nominal tariff (may even be negative), tariff protects domestic suppliers of raw materials more than domestic manufactuters if tariff on finished product exceeds tariff on imported input, effective tariff exceeds nominal tariff
supply of protectionism
increases depending on political importance of import-competing industry, whether domestic firms and workers face large costs of adjusting to rising import competition, public sympathy for a group of domestic businesses or workers
openness in the US economy after WW2
increasing openness, negotiated reductions in trade barriers
demand for protectionism rises with
intensification of domestic industry's comparative disadvantage, higher levels of import penetration, concentration of domestic production, degree of export dependence
dumping
international price discrimination. occurs when foreign buyers are charged lower prices than domestic buyers for identical product, selling in foreign markets at a price below cost of production
does trade make the poor even poorer
international trade and technological change increase demand for skilled workers, immigration decreases supply of skilled workers relative to unskilled workers, education and training opportunities reduce wage inequality between skilled and unskilled workers, union weakness increases the wage inequality between unskilled and skilled workers
opportunity of imports
international trade increases total productivity, wages paid by exporters higher than non-exporters, exporting industries require more educated workforce
