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Topic 21: Trade and the Environment

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Who wouldn't want to win the Lottery? 1960s, the Netherlands, natural gas. ... open economies. U.S. Sugar Quota. Important for Florida: 25% of U.S. sugar. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Topic 21: Trade and the Environment


1
Topic 21 Trade and the Environment
  • David Letson
  • Marine Affairs/Economics
  • University of Miami

2
Main Points
  • Reasons for Overlap
  • Comparative Advantage
  • GATT/WTO
  • Good or bad for the environment?

3
Lots of Overlap
  • Quality of life issues
  • Emerging global environmental issues
  • Expansion of environmental protection laws
  • Environmental standards trade frictions
  • Non-tariff trade restrictions remain

4
Dutch Disease
  • Who wouldnt want to win the Lottery?
  • 1960s, the Netherlands, natural gas.
  • Other sectors higher wages
  • Currency appreciation.
  • More likely in smaller, open economies.

5
U.S. Sugar Quota
  • Important for Florida 25 of U.S. sugar.
  • Allows 1.256 million tons of imports each year,
    then applies prohibitive tariff.
  • Estimate transfer and deadweight loss.
  • Expensive Program.

6
Gains from trading?
  • Pick two nations.
  • Does absolute advantage matter?
  • David Ricardo comparative advantage
  • Tiger Woods
  • Opportunity cost

7
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
  • 117 nations signed the Uruguay Round of 1993.
  • Seven prior rounds reduced tariffs by 75.
  • Signed in 1947 by US and 22 other nations
  • Centerpiece of international governance on trade.

8
Key GATT Articles
  • Article I, most favored nation clause
  • Article III, the national treatment clause
  • Article XI, tariffication clause
  • Article XX provides exceptions
  • Article XXII, consultation clause

9
Uruguay Round
  • Created World Trade Organization
  • Included 28 separate accords
  • agriculture,
  • textiles,
  • services,
  • intellectual property, and
  • foreign investment
  • Annual world income to rise 213B

10
Bad for the environment?
  • Freer trade promotes economic growth
  • Efficient resource use through specialization
  • Scale of economic activity expands.
  • Composition of output.
  • Technological innovation.
  • Harmonization
  • Enforcement of IEAs

11
International Environmental Agreements (IEAs)
  • Montreal Protocol, Kyoto, CITES, etc.
  • How many nations? How stable?
  • Should we allow trade restrictions?

12
Is trade good for the environment?
  • Pervasive externalities and market failures.
  • Manage resources and enforce property rights.
  • Trade not fundamental cause of degradation.
  • Wealth and quality of life preferences.
  • Allocative efficiency.

13
Too Much Consumption?
  • Yes, says Norman Myers.
  • Societal expectations for consumption.
  • Population growth and adverse technology.
  • change in lifestyle and reduced consumption.

14
Too Much Consumption?
  • No, say Jeffrey Vincent, Theodore Panayotou
  • Consumption patterns rather than levels.
  • Incentives for work and saving.
  • Market and policy failures.

15
Conclusions
  • Trade and environment More overlap to come.
  • Comparative advantage.
  • Trade as stimulus to growth.
  • Poverty sucks.

16
Questions?
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