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Regional Trading Arrangements

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Title: Regional Trading Arrangements


1
International Economics
Chapter 5
  • Regional Trading Arrangements

2
Chapter 5 Regional Trading Arrangements
  • 5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
  • 5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • 5.3 Practice of Regional Integration

3
5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
  • Free Trade Area
  • The most common scheme is referred to as a free
    trade area (FTA), in which all members of the
    group remove tariffs on each others product,
    while at the same time each member retains its
    independence in establishing trading policies
    with nonmembers.
  • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

4
5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
  • Customs Union
  • Like a free trade association, a customs union
    (CU) is an agreement among two or more trading
    partners to remove all tariff and nontariff trade
    barriers among themselves.
  • Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg (BENELUX)

5
5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
  • Common Market
  • A common market is a group of trading nations
    that permits the free movement of goods and
    services among member nations, the initiation of
    common external trade restrictions against
    nonmembers, and the free movement of factors of
    production across national borders within the
    economic bloc.
  • The Treaties of Rome in 1957 established a common
    market within the European Community (EC).

6
5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
  • Economic Union
  • Beyond these stages, economic integration could
    evolve to the stage of economic union, which
    includes all features of a common market but also
    implies the unification of economic institutions
    and the coordination of economic policy
    throughout all member nations.
  • The Treaties of Rome in 1957 established a common
    market within the European Community (EC).

7
5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
Some Regional Trading Arrangements in the World
Economy
Organizations Included Nations
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Brunei, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Cote dIvoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo
European Union (EU) Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom
Latin American Integration Association (LAIA) Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Canada, Mexico, the United States
South African Customs Union (SACU) Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland
8
Chapter 5 Regional Trading Arrangements
  • 5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
  • 5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • 5.3 Practice of Regional Integration

9
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • Static Effects
  • Country A, B, and C.
  • Assuming that A is the world high-cost producer
    of beer, and that initially A protects its
    producer with an ad valorem tariff of 100 percent
    against all foreign producers.
  • Suppose that, in autarky, beer would cost 5 per
    bottle in A, and B would be willing to export
    beer to A for 2 per bottle, while C, the
    low-cost world producer, is willing to export
    beer at a price of 1.5 per bottle.

10
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
Static Effects of Customs Union
11
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • Now, recall that we have assumed that A has a 100
    percent tariff in place. The effect of this
    tariff is to double the price of imported beer.
    Thus, the price of beer imported from C rises to
    3 per bottle.
  • Suppose that A were to negotiate a CU with
    Country B. Under such an arrangement, goods
    coming to A from Country B would not be charged a
    tariff. The tariff would remain on any goods
    coming from Country C. Then, consumers in A could
    buy beer from B at a price of 2. If they were to
    buy from C instead, the price would be 3.

12
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • As this example shows, the formation of a CU can
    have two effects on international trade.
  • First, there is the shift in the source of trade
    from C, the lowest-cost world producer, to B, the
    lowest-cost CU member nation. This shift in the
    source of trade is known as trade diversion.
  • The second effect of the formation of the CU is
    that trade expands for Country A. Imports rise
    from EF to GH. This comes about because consumers
    are able to pay a lower price for imports. The
    expansion of trade that results from CU formation
    is known as trade creation.

13
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • Let us calculate the welfare impact on Nation A
    of the creation of a CU between A and B.
  • If A forms a CU with Country B, consumers in As
    benefit. The price they pay fall from 3 to 2.
    Consumer surplus rises by abcd. Producer
    surplus falls by a, while tariff revenue falls by
    ce. Netting out these changes in surpluses
    yields a welfare impact on A of (bd)-e.
  • Because of the trade diversion, A no longer
    trades with Country C. The impact of this is for
    tariff revenues to fall. Part of this loss of
    tariff revenues, c, accrues to domestic residents
    in the form of lower prices. The remaining loss
    of tariff revenues, Area e, measures the amount
    of the effect of trade diversion.

14
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • Consumers in A pay a lower price to purchase the
    good, and hence, trade expands. The benefits of
    international trade are the familiar triangles
    equal in value to bd.
  • The lengths of the bases of the two triangles sum
    to equal the amount that trade has increased
    because of the CU. Thus, the sum of these two
    triangles represents the gain to A from trade
    creation. Thus, Areas bd measure the amount of
    the effect of trade creation.

15
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • What about the other nations?
  • B gains on the export side from this arrangement.
    It obtains export markets in A that it had
    previously been unable to penetrate. On the other
    hand, if A is a higher-cost producer than C, then
    when B lowers its tariffs on goods from A, it
    faces ambiguous welfare prospects. Meanwhile,
    Country C loses because its producers have lost
    markets.
  • Clearly, since the effect on A and B is ambiguous
    and C loses, the worldwide welfare effect of the
    formation of CU or other preferential trading
    relationships is anything but certain.

16
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • In general, A would eliminate its tariff with
    respect to Country C. The price of beer would
    fall to 1.5, and imports from C would expand to
    IJ.
  • The increase in imports represents pure trade
    creation. That is, in this example, trade
    diversion would be zero, since, both before and
    after the agreement, A trades with C.
  • For A, the welfare gains of the formation of a CU
    relative to tariff are bfgdhi.
  • Country C gain as well, because its exports rise.
    B neither gains nor loses in this case, because
    its trade has not been affected.

17
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
The Welfare Effects of a CU on Country A
Items Welfare Changes (Area) Welfare Changes (Area) Welfare Changes (Area) Welfare Changes (Area) Welfare Changes (Area)
Change in consumer surplus a b c d
Change in producer surplus -a -c
Change in government revenue -e
Net welfare change (for Country A) b d -e
18
5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • Dynamic effects
  • when a CU is formed and trade barriers among
    member nations are eliminated, producers in each
    nation become more efficient to meet the
    competition of other producers within the union.
  • A second possible benefit from the formation of a
    CU is that economies of scale are likely to
    result from the enlarged market.
  • Another possible benefit is the stimulus to
    investment to take advantage of the enlarged
    market and to meet the increased competition.
  • These dynamic gains resulting from the formation
    of a CU are presumed to be much greater than the
    static gains discussed above and to be very
    significant.

19
Chapter 5 Regional Trading Arrangements
  • 5.1 Types of Regional Trading Arrangements
  • 5.2 Effects of Customs Union
  • 5.3 Practice of Regional Integration

20
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • European Union
  • In the 1950s, Western Europe began to dismantle
    its trade barriers in response to successful
    tariff negotiations under the auspices of the
    General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT).
  • the European Union (EU), first known as the
    European Community, was created by the Treaty of
    Rome in 1957.
  • The EU initially consisted of six nations
    Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the United
    Kingdom and Ireland, and then Denmark had joined
    the trade bloc.
  • Greece became the tenth member in 1981, and the
    entry of Spain and Portugal in 1987 raised the
    membership to 12 nations. In 1995, Austria,
    Finland, and Sweden were admitted into the EU.

21
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • Members of the EU first dismantled tariffs and
    established a free-trade area by 1968. In 1970,
    the EU became a full-fledged customs union when
    it adopted a common external tariff system for
    its members. On January 1, 1993, the EU removed
    all remaining restrictions on the free flow of
    goods, services, and resources among its members,
    thus becoming a single unified market.
  • The formation of the EU significantly expanded
    trade in industrial goods with nonmembers. This
    was due to
  • The rapid growth of the EU, which increased its
    demand for imports of industrial products from
    outside the union.
  • The reduction to very low levels of the average
    tariff on imports of industrial products as a
    result of the Kennedy and Tokyo Rounds of GATT.

22
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • At the Lome Convention in 1975, the EU eliminated
    most trade barriers on imports from 46 developing
    nations in Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific
    region that were former colonies of EU nations.
  • Quotas and tariffs on developing nations exports
    are now scheduled to be gradually reduced as a
    result of the Uruguay Round of GATT completed in
    December 1993.
  • In February 2000, Lome IV expired and was
    replaced by a new agreement has the same general
    purpose as the Lome Convention and is to remain
    in force for 20 years, subject to revisions every
    five years.

23
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • Other highlights in the operation of the EU are
    as follows
  • Member nations have adopted a common value-added
    tax system, under which a tax is levied on the
    value added to the product at each stage of its
    production and passed on to consumers.
  • The Commission (the executive body of the EU
    headquartered in Brussels) proposes laws,
    monitors compliance with treaties, and
    administers common policies such as antitrust
    policies.
  • The Council of Ministers (whose members represent
    their own national governments) makes final
    decisions but only on the recommendation of the
    Commission.
  • Plans have also been drawn for harmonization of
    monetary and fiscal policies, and eventual full
    political union.

24
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • North American Free Trade Agreement
  • The United States discussed for a free-trade
    agreement with Canada, which became effective in
    1989. This paved the way for Mexico, Canada, and
    the United States to form the North American Free
    Trade Agreement (NAFTA) that went into effect in
    1994.
  • The establishment of NAFTA was expected to
    provide each member nation better access to the
    others markets, technology, labor and expertise.
  • The United States would benefit from Mexicos
    pool of cheap and increasingly skilled labor,
    while Mexico would benefit from the U.S.
    investment and expertise.
  • NAFTA eliminates tariffs among the three member
    nations over a 15-year period and at the same
    time substantially reduces nontariff barriers.

25
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • In the case of automobiles, Mexican tariffs were
    immediately reduced from 20 to 10 percent and
    were scheduled to decline to zero over the next
    10 year.
  • In the textile and apparel industry, trade
    barriers were eliminated on 20 percent of
    U.S.-Mexican trade and barriers on an additional
    60 percent are to be removed over a 6-year
    period.
  • With respect to foreign investment and financial
    services in general, all barriers to the movement
    of capital were immediately dropped.
  • NAFTA was the first regional agreement among
    nations with such diverse income levels

26
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • Association of Southeast Asian Nations
  • The Association of Southeast Asian Nations
    (ASEAN) now comprises 10 members Brunei,
    Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore,
    Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia.
  • In 1992, ASEAN signed ASEAN Free Trade Area
    (AFTA) agreement supporting local manufacturing
    in all members.
  • The primary goals of AFTA seek to
  • Increase ASEAN's competitive edge as a
    production base in the world market through the
    elimination of tariffs and non-tariff barriers
    within ASEAN.
  • Attract more foreign direct investment to ASEAN.

27
5.3 Practice of Regional Integration
  • ASEAN Plus Three is a forum that functions as a
    coordinator of cooperation between ASEAN and the
    three East Asian nations of China, Japan, and
    South Korea.
  • The ASEANChina Free Trade Area (ACFTA) is a free
    trade area among the ten members of ASEAN and
    China. The initial framework agreement was signed
    in 2002 with the intent on establishing a free
    trade area among the eleven nations by 2010.
  • The free trade area came into effect on 1 January
    2010. ACFTA is the largest free trade area in
    terms of population and the third largest in
    terms of nominal GDP. By July 2010, ASEAN had
    become Chinas third largest trade partner and
    China had been ASEANs largest trade partner.
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