Top Banner
INCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová
17

I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

Dec 18, 2015

Download

Documents

Augusta Evans
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

INCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY.

INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY

Subject: International Economics

Dominika Droppová

Sabína Gašparová

Page 2: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

INCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY

What is the trade policy aboute?- Reality vs Asset

Review: - Electoral Competition

- Collective Action

- Modeling the Political Process

- Who Gets Protected ?

Page 3: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

ELECTORAL COMPETITION

Assumption - Two competing parties.- Policy can be described along a single dimension (tariff

rate).- Voters differ in the policies they prefer.

For example:- One country:

- export - skill-intensive goods- import - labor-intensive goods

- Voters: - voters with high skill levels will favor low tariff rates- voters with low skills will be better off if the country

imposes a high tariff

Page 4: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.
Page 5: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

COLLECTIVE ACTION

The problem of collective action:

The group as a whole has bigger interest to press for favorable policies than individuals.

This problem can best be overcome when a group is small and organized.

Explain why policies that not only seem to produce more costs than benefits but that also seem to hurt far more voters than they help can nonetheless be adopted.

Page 6: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

MODELING THE POLITICAL PROCESS

While politicians may win elections partly because they advocate popular policies, a successful campaign also requires money...

Politicians will not ignore overall welfare, but they will be willing to trade off some reduction in the welfare of voters in return for a larger campaign fund. As a result, well-organized groups—that is, groups that are able to overcome.

Page 7: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

WHO GETS PROTECTED ?

Many developing countries traditionally have protected a wide range of manufacturing, in a policy known as import-substituting industrialization.

Much protectionism is concentrated in just two sectors:

- agriculture,

- clothing.

Page 8: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY

From the mid-1930s until about 1980, the United States and other advanced countries removed tariffs and some other barriers to trade.

The great postwar liberalization of trade was achieved through international negotiation.

It means that governments agreed to engage in mutual tariff reduction

reduced protection for each country’s import-competing industries

to reduced protection by other countries against that country’s export industries.

Page 9: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.
Page 10: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

THE ADVANTAGES OF NEGOTIATION

Two reasons why it is easier to lower tariffs as part of a mutual agreement than to do so as a unilateral policy:

- mutual agreement helps mobilize support for

freer trade,

- negotiated agreements on trade can help avoid trade wars.

For example:

Two countries (Japan, United States) ilustrated examples on mutual agreement and trade wars.

Page 11: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

THIS SITUATION IS KNOWN AS A PRISONER’S DILEMMA.

Page 12: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

INTERNATIONAL TRADE AGREEMENTS: A BRIEF HISTORY

Multilateral negotiations began soon after the end of World War II.

There are two the most important organizations:

- General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT),

- World Trade Organization (WTO).Create GATT-WTO approach (system):- the principal ratchet in the system is the

process of binding.

Page 13: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

Trade round process - large group of countries get together to negotiate a set of tariff reductions and other measures to liberalize trade

There are 8 trade rounds:- the first five trade rounds under the GATT took the form of “parallel” bilateral negotiations

- the sixth multilateral trade agreement, known as the Kennedy Round

- the seventh multilateral trade agreement, known as the Tokyo Round

- the last of which the Uruguay Round (results of the Uruguay Round are not that easy to summarize. The most important results make two groups: trade liberalization and administrative reforms).

Page 14: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

TRADE LIBERALIZATION

Liberalize trade in:

- agriculture

- cloting

World trade in agricultural and textiles products has been highly distorted.

Page 15: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

ADMINISTRATIVE REFORMS

How different is the WTO from the GATT? The GATT’s neglect of trade in services became an

increasingly glaring omission, because modern economies have increasingly focused on the production of services rather than physical goods.

The WTO agreement includes rules on trade in services (the General Agreement on Trade in Services, or GATS)

The most important new aspect of the WTO, however, is generally acknowledged to be its “dispute settlement” procedure.

The WTO contains a much more formal and effective procedure

Page 16: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

THE DOHA DISAPPOINTMENT

It´s the ninth major round of world trade negotiations

preferential trading agreements

free trade area

customs union

trade creation vs trade diversion

Page 17: I NCOME DISTRIBUTION AND TRADE POLICY. I NTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATIONS AND TRADE POLICY Subject: International Economics Dominika Droppová Sabína Gašparová.

Thank you for attention