1996

Abstracto

This paper examines the rationale for the rules on domestic subsidies in international trade agreements through a framework that emphasizes commitment. We build a model where the policy-maker has a tariff and a production subsidy at its disposal, taxation can be distortionary and the import-competing sector lobbies the government for favourable policies. The model shows that, under political pressures, the government will turn to subsidies when its ability to provide protection is curtailed by a trade agreement that binds tariffs only. We refer to this as the policy substitution problem. When factors of production are mobile in the long-run but investments are irreversible in the short-run, we show that the government cannot credibly commit vis-à-vis the domestic lobby unless the trade agreement also regulates production subsidies, thus addressing the policy substitution problem. Finally, we employ the theory to analyze the Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM) Agreement within the GATT/WTO system.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/papers/25189808/134
2012-09-25
2024-11-22
http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/papers/25189808/134
Loading
  • Published online: 25 Sept 2012
Este es un campo obligatorio
Por favor, introduce una dirección de correo electrónico válida
La aprobación fue un éxito
Datos inválidos
Ocurrió un error
La aprobación fue parcialmente exitosa, los siguientes elementos seleccionados no se pudieron procesar debido a un error
aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cud3RvLWlsaWJyYXJ5Lm9yZy8K