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Argument For and Against Protectionism

Argument For and Against Protectionism. Dedicated to Pat Buchanan, an interesting modern proponent of protection. PROTECTIONISM Protecting domestic industries against foreign trade. Why use Tariffs, Quotas, VERs, and many other methods?. To Save Jobs!. Any other reasons?

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Argument For and Against Protectionism

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  1. Argument For and Against Protectionism • Dedicated to Pat Buchanan, an interesting modern proponent of protection.

  2. PROTECTIONISMProtecting domestic industries against foreign trade. Why use Tariffs, Quotas, VERs, and many other methods?

  3. To Save Jobs! • Any other reasons? • To save jobs • To offset economic distortions • To promote infant industries/to promote economic development through industrial development • To promote developing governments • To promote the national defense

  4. First, why not protect domestic industry? • We have already reviewed arguments for free trade. Consider arguments against protectionism. Note the specific economic inefficiencies of tariffs.

  5. How Costly is Protectionism? Robert C. Feenstra, p. 3

  6. Introductory Review: Tariffs and Quotas

  7. Sd Pt a b d PROW Dd S0 S1 D1 D0 A tariff is a per unit tax that raises the price from the ROW market level. It reduces imports from SoDo to S1D1. But that permits domestic producers to increase sales from S0 to S1. P a = Change from CS to PS b = “Production effect” c = Tariff Revenues d = “Consumption effect” c Q

  8. Sd Sd plus quota PD w/ quota a b d PROW Dd S0 S1 D1 D0 A quota is much like a tariff. Rather than raising the price through the tax, it is raised by restricting supply. We strictly limit imports (adding Sc plus quota to the previous diagram. P a = Change from CS to PS b = “Production effect” c c = Quota rents d = “Consumption effect” Q

  9. How costly are b and d for our economy?

  10. Less than b, c, and d. (We usually transfer c with quotas to other countries)

  11. And less than a, b, c, d, the consumer losses.

  12. Costs and benefits of VERs. This need be your only exposure. (p. 6)

  13. How can quotas affect foreign investment. (p. 11)

  14. Loss of product variety. (P. 14)

  15. Bilateralism vs. Multilateralism, or GATT/WTO vs. EU/NAFTA

  16. Now, why protect?Trade Barriers to Offset Distortions? • In a world of perfect allocation, we’d have perfect efficiency. But we are not in such a world. If better allocation is possible through economic policies (e.g., tariffs), we are in a “second best” world. But it’s hard to say what you have if you don’t have optimal conditions. Externalities in the real world cause a divergence of social and private costs and benefits in numerous markets, as do subsidies.

  17. Trade Barriers to Offset Distortions? • Economic policy distortions such as externalities cause a divergence in the real world of social and private costs and benefits in numerous markets. Subsidies do the same thing. • Could tariffs offset market distortions?

  18. Such Distortions include: • Monopoly prices • Distorting taxes • External costs • External benefits

  19. Protectionsim to offset distortions? The “Specificity Rule” suggests tariffs are not an optimal tool to solve social problems. The rule is: Intervene at the source of any given problem. It is usually more efficient to use the policy tool that acts as directly as possible on the source of the distortion, reducing the difference between private and social costs and benefits.

  20. Arguments for Protectionism To Promote Domestic Production? • Alexander Hamilton and Friedrich List, fathers of the American protectionist tradition. • Will infant industries ever grow up? • Why not subsidize rather than protect, or better, • Why not borrow on future earnings potential if industrial viability can really be expected?

  21. Arguments for Protectionism • Why disadvantage consumers? • Why postpone future, unavoidable adjustments? Assistance to displaced workers as an alternative to protection -- relocation and training

  22. Arguments for Protectionism • Tariffs can be a reliable revenue source for developing countries. • This developing government (public revenue) argument is about the only one some economists like. But there is evidence that countries develop more rapidly with open economies.

  23. Arguments for ProtectionPromote the National Defense • National Defense was an argument that even Adam Smith liked. • But every product can demand protection on this basis. • Imports during the Viet Nam war.

  24. The Costs of Protection, especially for the poor • See “Toughest on the Poor: America’s Flawed Tariff System. See p. 19. • What poor are referred to here? (p. 22) • Does it make sense for the president to trade tariffs with congress in exchange for larger (usually free) trade deals?

  25. The Costs of Protection, especially for the poor • See “Toughest on the Poor: America’s Flawed Tariff System. See p. 19. • What is the gist of this article?

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