Protectionism 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Impact of a trade subsidy on domestic producers

A

Producers get the world price + subsidy. Higher outputs and revenues.

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2
Q

Impact of a trade subsidy on consumers

A

No direct effect - assuming the subsidy is not large enough to change the world price

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3
Q

Impact of a trade subsidy on the government

A

It can reduce the volume of imports by encouraging domestic production

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4
Q

Evaluation of the impact of a trade subsidy on domestic producers

A

Risk of a dependency culture

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5
Q

Evaluation of the impact of a trade subsidy on consumers

A

May face higher taxes if expensive subsidies take up a high % of government spending

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6
Q

Evaluation of the impact of a trade subsidy on the government

A

It does not generate tax revenues - cause budget pressures

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7
Q

Arguments against trade protectionism

A
  • risk of retaliation
  • market distortions
  • higher prices for consumers
  • regressive effect on income inequality
  • by-passing import controls
  • higher costs for exporters
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8
Q

What is the widely help view about import tariffs

A

That they can lead to a deadweight loss of economic welfare through the effects of higher prices for consumers and also the distorting effects of an import tariff on market competition, prices and the allocation of scarce resources.

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9
Q

Motivations for protectionism

A
  • job protection in domestic industries
  • response to dumping allegations
  • raise tax revenues
  • improve BoP
  • environmental / market failure
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10
Q

What does economic nationalism describe

A

Policies to protect domestic consumption, jobs and investment using tariffs and other barriers to the movement of labour, goods and capital

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11
Q

When does resource nationalism happen

A

When a government seeks to gain greater benefit from its natural resources

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12
Q

When can resource nationalisation occur

A

Via outright expropriation - when a government takes away a private company’s assets - to policies such as higher taxes on the rents of mining companies, local content laws and tougher regulations

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13
Q

When can dumping happen

A

When firms sell products abroad at below costs or significantly below prices in the home market

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14
Q

What is dumping when firms sell products abroad at below costs

A

Predatory pricing which is illegal

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15
Q

What is dumping when it occurs significantly below prices in the home market

A

Implies a strategy of price discrimination - this is not illegal

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16
Q

How has China made it harder for EU steel producers to compete

A

By dumping its steel products on the EU, selling them for less than they are worth

17
Q

What do anti-dumping duties (or tariffs) do

A

Raise the price of s product to help protect local producers

18
Q

Who allows anti-dumping tariffs

A

WTO - they are allowed when duping have been established

19
Q

What are the three main options when introducing an anti-dumping import duties

A
  • an ad valorem duty
  • a specific duty
  • a variable duty
20
Q

What is an ad valorem duty

A

% of the net EU frontier price - this is the most common import duty.

21
Q

What is a variable duty

A

A minimum import price (MIP)