International Economics: Tariffs and Its Implication
International Economics: Tariffs and Its Implication
International Economics: Tariffs and Its Implication
Defining tariffs
A tariff is a tax (duty) levied on products as
they move between nations
Import tariff - levied on imports
Export tariff - levied on exported goods as they
leave the country
Protective tariff - designed to insulate domestic
producers from competition
Revenue tariff - intended to raise funds for the
government (no longer important in industrial
countries)
Tariffs
Types of tariff
Specific tariff
Fixed monetary fee per unit of the product
Ad valorem tariff
Levied as a percentage of the value of the product
Compound tariff
A combination of the above, often levied on finished
goods whose components are also subject to tariff if
imported separately
Effective rate of Protection
The impact of a tariff is often different from its
stated amount. Nominal tariff rate gives only general
idea about protection.
Different tariff rates on raw materials, intermediary
goods and final goods have to be taken into
consideration to understand their combined effect on
the domestic production and to comprehend the
actual level of protection.
The effective tariff rate measures the total increase in
domestic production that the tariff makes possible,
compared to free trade
Tariffs
Consumer surplus
The difference between the price buyers
would be willing to pay and what they
actually pay
Producer surplus
The revenue producers receive above the
minimum amount required to induce them to
produce a good
Tariffs
Price ($)
5
Supply
5
B 4 Producer
(minimum price)
Consumer surplus
4 surplus
3
3
C (actual price) 2
A C (actual price)
A 2
Total
expen Demand 1 Total
1 diture (maximum variable cost
D E price) B0 D
0
0 2 4 6 8 10
0 2 4 6 8 10
10,500
10,000
9,500
g
9,000 E
8,500
e f G
8,000 Sd+w+t
7,500 a b c d F
7,000 Sd+w
6,500 h
6,000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 D110
d
Quantity of autos
Deadweight Loss=b+d
Welfare effects of tariffs
Sd
E
9,600
G Sd+w+t
8,800
a b c F
8,000
d Sd+w
7,800 e
Dd
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150
Quantity of autos
Stolper-Samuelson Theorem
Stolper-Samuelson Theorem demonstrates that the effects of a
tariff are unambiguous within the context of the standard trade
model. Following the Heckscher-Ohlin reasoning, we can say
that a country exports that good which it produces primary with
the help of its abundant factor of production. A tariff will
decrease production of exportables and lead to an increase in
production of the import-competing good, and benefit the scarce
factor-that used intensively in the import sector. Thus a tariff will
benefit a country’s scarce factor of production in an unambiguous
fashion and cause real income of the abundant factor to fall.
Tariff effects
Job protection
Protect against cheap foreign labor
Fairness in trade - level playing field
Protect domestic standard of living
Equalization of production costs
Infant-industry protection
Political and social reasons
Reasons for tariffs
Politics of protectionism
Politics of protectionism