Government Policy and International Trade Flashcards

1
Q

free trade

A

occurs when governments do not attempt to restrict what citizens can buy from another country or what they can sell to another country

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2
Q

specific tariffs

A

: levied as a fixed charge for each unit of a good imported (e.g., $3 per barrel of oil)

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3
Q

ad valorem tariffs

A

a proportion of the value of the imported good

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4
Q

Impact of tariffs

A
  • Increase government revenues
  • Force consumers to pay more for certain imports
  • Are pro-producer and anti-consumer
  • Reduce the overall efficiency of the world economy
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5
Q

instruments of trade policy (7)

A
  1. Tariffs
  2. Subsidies
  3. Import Quotas and Voluntary Export Restraints
  4. Export Tariffs and Bans
  5. Local Content Requirements
  6. Administrative Policies
  7. Anti-dumping policies or countervailing duties
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6
Q

subsidies

A
  • Help domestic producers compete against foreign imports and gain export markets
    –> Ex. agriculture
  • Domestic producers gain while consumers typically absorb the costs
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7
Q

Import quotas

A

Usually enforced by issuing import licenses to a group of individuals or firms

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8
Q

tariff rate quotas

A

Hybrid of a quota and a tariff where a lower tariff is applied to imports within the quota than to those over the quota

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9
Q

voluntary export restraint (VER)

A

Can appease protectionist measures in a country

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10
Q

quota rent

A

The extra profit that producers make when supply is artificially limited by an import quota is referred to as a quota rent

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11
Q

export tariff

A

Goal is to discriminateagainstexporting in order to ensure that there is sufficient supply of a good within a country

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12
Q

export ban

A
  • Partially or entirely restricts the export of a good
    –> Ex. 1975 ban on U.S. crude oil exports
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13
Q

local content requirements

A
  • Requirement expressed in physical or value terms
  • Protects domestic producers
  • Consumers face higher prices
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14
Q

administrative policies

A
  • Bureaucratic rules designed to make it difficult for imports to enter a country.
    —> Japan’s car market has been hard for foreigners to crack. In 2016, only 6 percent of the 4.9 million cars sold in Japan were foreign, and only 1 percent were U.S. cars.
  • Polices hurt consumers by limiting choice
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15
Q

antidumping policies or countervailing duties

A
  • Objective is to protect domestic producers from unfair foreign competition
  • Domestic producer can file a petition with the Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission (ITC)
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16
Q

dumping

A
  • Enables firms to unload excess production in foreign markets
  • May be result of predatory behavior
    –> Firms use low prices to drive competitors out and then raise prices and earn more profit
17
Q

What are the political arguments for government intervention? (6)

A
  1. Protecting jobs and industries
  2. Protecting national security
  3. Retaliating
  4. Protecting consumers
  5. Furthering foreign policy objectives
  6. Protecting human rights
18
Q

what are the economic arguments for government intervention (2)

A
  1. infant industry argument
  2. Strategic trade policy argument
19
Q

infant industry argument (and its criticisms)

A
  • Support comes through tariffs, import quotas, subsidies
  • Two criticisms
    1. Protection of manufacturing from foreign competition does no good unless the protection helps make the industry efficient
  1. Assumes firms are unable to make efficient long-term investments by borrowing money from the domestic or international capital market
20
Q

Strategic trade policy argument

A
  • Government can help raise national income when a domestic firm gains first-mover advantages
  • A government may intervene in an industry by helping domestic firms overcome the barriers to entry created by foreign firms that have already reaped first-mover advantages
  • Both of these support government intervention in international trade.
21
Q

describe Krugman and Retaliation and trade war (revised case for free trade)

A
  • Krugman – strategic trade policies aimed at establishing domestic firms in a dominant position in a global industry boost national income at the expense of other countries

–> These policies will probably provoke retaliation
—> Help establish antidumping policies and rules that minimize trade-distorting subsidies

22
Q

domestic politics case for free trade

A
  • Governments don’t always act in the national interest
  • Interest groups may influence policy
  • Krugman concludes that strategic trade policy is almost certain to be captured by special-interest groups which will distort it to their own ends
23
Q

strong economic arguments for unrestricted free trade –> development of current world trading system

A
  • Governments unwilling to unilaterally lower trade barriers for fear others might not follow suit
  • General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
  • World Trade Organization (WTO)