This paper suggests a rationale for the GATT/WTO ban on export subsidies by showing that, in a linear Cournot profit-shifting model in which countries invest in a policy infrastructure before imposing trade policy, an agreement banning export subsidies tends to be more self- enforcing than one banning tariffs. Oligopoly introduces asymmetry between import tariffs and export subsidies: terms-of-trade and profit-shifting effects run in the same direction for import tariffs but in opposite directions for export subsidies. This asymmetry and the fact that it takes time for countries to change their trade policy infrastructure imply that the payoffs on the off-equilibrium path under an import-tariff-only agreement tend to be lower than those on the off-equilibrium path under an export-subsidy-only agreement. Specifically, punishment with tariffs is harsher than punishment with subsidies. When the set of instruments is restricted to import tariffs, a trade agreement needs to neutralize both the terms-of-trade and profit-shifting externalities.
机构:
CNRS, Fac Droit Econ & Gest, UMR 7322, LEO, Rue Blois BP 26739, F-45067 Orleans 2, FranceCNRS, Fac Droit Econ & Gest, UMR 7322, LEO, Rue Blois BP 26739, F-45067 Orleans 2, France
机构:
Ctr Econ Sorbonne, F-75647 Paris 13, France
Univ Paris 01, Paris Sch Econ, F-75231 Paris 05, France
Univ Paris 09, Paris, FranceCtr Econ Sorbonne, F-75647 Paris 13, France