VoxEU Column Global crisis International trade

Is protectionism dying?

The limited resort to protectionism during the financial crisis is often attributed to the WTO or to sensible macroeconomic policy. This column argues that there is more to the story. The combination of national laws, regional agreements, and powerful interest groups has worked to stop protectionism in its tracks.

Though countries enacted hundreds of protectionist measures during the global financial crisis, only a small part of world trade has been affected – just 0.8% between October 2008 and October 2009 (WTO 2011). Even the most frequent targets of trade-discriminatory measures – such as China – and perpetrators – such as India – saw export and import trends change little during the crisis.1 Moreover, the impact appears to have subsided quickly. The share of world trade affected by protectionist measures from May to October 2010 fell to 0.2% and world trade flows surpassed pre-crisis levels in 2010.

But protectionism is not dead yet, as evidenced by its increase during the crisis, the rise in protectionist measures in the past six months, and the high barriers to trade that persist across large sectors. And, with the legacy of the last crisis, governments are now more vulnerable than before to the resurgence of protectionism if another global crisis strikes. It is therefore essential to understand the forces that helped limit protectionism during the last crisis.

What limited protection during the global crisis?

In contrast to the 1930s, efforts to contain the depth and duration of the recession, such as concerted stimulus measures by G20, as well as flexible exchange rates, have helped countries adjust without resorting to extensive protectionism. Social safety nets have alleviated the effects of recession. WTO disciplines, which are enforceable through its judicial arm, i.e. the Dispute Settlement Mechanism, have also helped to curb protectionism, though their applicability is limited across large swaths of trade – including services, agriculture, and manufactured imports in developing countries – and they do not prevent countries from using safeguarding and antidumping provisions to justify protectionism.2

Two less noticed – and probably even more important – factors in preventing the spread of protectionism have been, first,  the embedding of liberalisation in difficult-to-change national laws and the spread of regional agreements, and second, structural shifts that have increased the role of trade in production and consumption deterred protectionism.

National disciplines

Autonomous liberalisation has accounted for the bulk of trade liberalisation in developing countries over the last three decades and also played a large role in advanced countries.3

The enactment of a liberal trading environment with strong legal institutions inspires confidence among importers and exporters in a country’s trading environment. This is particularly true where the rule of law is strong. As shown in Figure 1 below, though not necessarily demonstrating causality, a country’s share of world trade is positively and significantly correlated to its score on the World Bank’s Rule-of-Law index, indicating a potential relationship between the strength of its legal infrastructure and its capacity to conduct trade. Given that the rule of law is strong in countries that account for the lion’s share of world trade (China is a partial exception, with its low rule of law score), the world trading environment has clearly become safer and more predictable.

Figure 1. Share of world trade and rule of law

Note: Based on a sample of 183 countries. The World Bank Rule-of-Law index is measured on a scale ranging from -2.5 to 2.5, with higher values corresponding to better governance outcomes. Source: World Bank.

In addition, national laws affecting trade are often difficult to change. Because most of the largest traders have enacted laws that liberalise trade, this is good news for those that hope to limit protectionism. In the US, for example, a permanent tariff increase (even if allowed by the WTO) would require passage by majorities in the Senate and the House of Representatives, as well as the president’s signature. Procedures in the EU are arguably even more elaborate.

Temporary protectionist measures – such as antidumping and countervailing duties, as well as safeguarding measures – are also hard to enact. The introduction of national trade tribunals has given firms a mechanism through which they can contest trade measures. In the US, for example, the Department of Commerce and the International Trade Commission are bound to conduct detailed investigations that ask potentially affected domestic and foreign firms about their trade practices. Foreign companies that participate in the process have generally faced lower-than-average duties.4

Many national governments have developed mechanisms to ensure that trade policy reflects the general interest. For example, US trade officials often lobby Congress against protectionist bills, and pro-trade bureaucratic interests in China (Centred in the Ministry of Commerce) promote the adoption of international practices, including trade liberalisation. The Australian Productivity Commission, which produces periodic reports on the economy-wide effects of trade barriers through an open, multi-stakeholder process is another example.5

Regional Trade Agreements

In addition to national processes, regional trade agreements (RTAs) – which now cover about 60% of world trade in goods – help limit protectionism. RTAs contain provisions establishing dispute settlement mechanisms (DSMs) that enable countries to challenge violations of the agreements, thereby combating protectionism (Davey 2006). The NAFTA DSM, for example – which reviews cases of antidumping and countervailing duties – has often lowered US trade remedies against Canada and Mexico (Hufbauer and Schott 2005). Countries rarely use these DSMs, which may in part reflect the clarity of RTAs, which are made among a small number of partners and provide for free trade across the vast majority of products.

Furthermore, RTAs often establish regular, high-level dialogues on trade disputes, treaty implementation, and further liberalisation. Such forums provide another mechanism for resolving serious violations of the agreement. The EU-Mexico Free Trade Agreement, for example, established a joint council that meets every other year to discuss a wide range of strategic issues, including trade-related concerns.6 Some countries without bilateral trade treaties have also established regular high-level dialogues, such as the US-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade, which furnish a direct diplomatic channel for resolving trade disputes and discussing further liberalisation.

“Facts on the ground”

With the growth and increased granularity of trade, import-competing sectors no longer hold the bulk of political power in domestic protectionism debates. Some of the most vulnerable import-competing sectors in advanced countries, such as garments and footwear, have become much smaller, while exporters have become larger. Meanwhile, large investments have been made assuming that the free trade regime will continue; the longer the regime persists, the larger these investments and the greater the vested interest in it. And retailers and consumers have come to rely on imports.7

Imports also add significant value domestically through distribution, marketing, and retail. Distribution margins – such as retail trade and transportation costs – account for about 20% of purchasers’ prices in many advanced economies (Godlberg and Campa 2002). In addition, large and politically powerful companies, ranging from retailers to shippers, have come to depend on imports for which comparably priced domestic goods are unavailable. For example, a third of US imports of textiles and apparel come from China. If high tariffs were enacted – increasing the cost of such imports – the profitability of firms that depend on them would be in danger. Predictably, these firms lobby against trade barriers. The growing consumer preference for varied goods, often satisfied through imports, adds to the resistance to impose higher tariffs.8

Furthermore, many firms have come to rely on international supply chains, which include imports of input components for production and exports of such materials to foreign manufacturers. Imports of components now represent more than half the imports of OECD countries and three-quarters of the imports of China and Brazil. According to OECD estimates, imported intermediate content accounted for about a quarter of OECD economies’ exports in 2005. The internationalisation of production and the rise of intra-firm trade have added more voices favouring trade liberalisation to the debate.9

Thus, any initiative to increase protection across the board may penalise exporters both directly (through the higher prices of imported components) and indirectly (through possible retaliation from trading partners). As a result, firms that produce and trade intermediate goods view protectionism as a direct threat to their production chain, market access, and, ultimately, profitability (Hummels et al. 2009).Many countries, such as Mexico, have implemented policies that give exporters duty-free access to imported intermediates.

Moreover, due to the rise of intra-firm trade – which amounted to about 40% of total US trade over the past ten years – much of the cost of raising tariffs on parts and components is directly borne by domestic companies. In other words, the protection that occurs is effectively against a country’s own firms, which can make countries more reluctant to erect trade barriers.

The fierce global competition for foreign direct investment is now also believed to discourage protectionism. Such competition induced developing economies to unilaterally reduce tariffs on parts and components (Vézina 2010). More open economies generally enjoy higher foreign direct investment, as shown in Figure 2 below, as foreign subsidiaries are better able to serve their purposes – including distribution, marketing, and production for home and foreign markets (which often rely on imported components) – in countries with more open and predictable trading regimes.

Figure 2. FDI and trade openness

Source: World Bank and United Nations Conference on Trade and Development

Policy implications

In addition to good macroeconomic and social policy, which have helped contain the recession’s duration and depth, the task of ensuring markets remain open requires a more realistic approach to trade negotiation. Such an approach must embrace plurilateral, bilateral, and regional processes to maintain the momentum of change.

For the WTO to remain relevant, it must view itself as the facilitator of these processes, and of autonomous liberalisation, rather than only as a forum for the exchange of multilateral concessions.10 Domestic forces that oppose protectionism should be mobilised more systematically, as is done under the Australian Productivity Commission, to ensure transparent examination of trade protection proposals by broad constituencies. In an interconnected world, policymakers must also pay increased attention to trade facilitation and to lower trade costs, thus creating more “facts on the ground” in the form of investments that are predicated on trade and consolidating political support for liberal trade policies. These measures will help foster a liberal trading environment and further strengthen the resistance to protectionism.

References

Adler, Matthew and Gary Hufbauer (2009), “Policy Liberalisation and US Merchandise Trade Growth, 1980–2006”, Peterson Institute for International Economics Working Paper 09-2, Peterson Institute Press.

Baldwin, Richard (2010), “Unilateral Tariff Liberalization”, International Economy, Journal of the Japan Society of International Economics, 14:10-43.

Baldwin, Richard (1994), “Towards an Integrated Europe”, CEPR Press, London.

Baldwin, Richard (1993), “A Domino Theory of Regionalism”, National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 4465.

Bergsten, Fred (1996), “Globalising Free Trade”, Foreign Affairs, May/June.

Broda, Christian and David E Weinstein (2006), “Globalization and the Gains from Variety”, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 121(1): 541–85.

Dadush, Uri, Shimelse Ali, and Rachel Odell (2011), “Is Protectionism Dying?”, The Carnegie Papers, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, May.

Dadush, Uri and William Shaw (2011), “Trade: The Great Development Arena”, in Uri Dadush and William Shaw(eds.), Juggernaut: How Emerging Markets Are Reshaping Globalization.

Davey, William (2006), “Dispute Settlement in the WTO and RTAs: A Comment”, in Lorand Bartels and Federico Ortino(eds.), Regional Trade Agreements and the WTO Legal System, Oxford University Press.

Evenett, Simon (ed.) (2009), The Unrelenting Pressure of Protectionism: The 3rd GTA Report, Global Trade Alert, CEPR.

Goldberg, Linda and Jose Manuel Campa (2002), “Distribution Margins, Imported Inputs, and the Insensitivity of the CPI to Exchange Rates”, NBER Working Paper 12121.

High-Level Trade Experts Group (2011), “The Doha Round: Setting a Deadline, Defining a Final Deal”, Interim report.

Hufbauer, Gary and Jeffrey Schott (2005), “NAFTA Revisited: Achievements and Challenges”, no. 332, Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Hummels, David, Jun Ishii, and Kei-Mu Yi (2009), “The Nature and Growth of Vertical Specialization in World Trade”, Journal of International Economics, 54.

Irwin, Douglas (1998), “Historical Perspectives on US Trade Policy”, NBER Reporter, Winter 1998/1999.

Jara, Alejandro (2005), “Las Virtudes de la Promiscuida,” Regionalismo Global: Los DilemasparaAmérica Latina, eds. Ramón Torrent and Antoni Estevadeordal, Barcelona: FundacióCIDOB (Centre d’Investigació de Relacions Internacionals i Desenvolupament).

Martin, Will, and Francis Ng (2004), “Sources of Tariff Reductions”, Background paper for Global Economic Prospects: Trade Regionalism, and Development, World Bank.

Rose, Andrew (2002), “Do We Really Know That the WTO Increases Trade?”, CEPR Discussion Paper 3538.

Vezina, Pierre-Louis (2010), “Race-to-the-bottom Tariff Cutting”, HEID Working Paper  12/2010.

WTO (2011), “Report on G20 Trade Measures: October 2010-April 2011”.


1 Among those countries that were the top targets of trade-discriminatory measures during the crisis, China’s export volumes as a share of GDP were 0.4 percentage points higher in 2010 than in 2008, while exports as a percentage of GDP in the US and Germany remained only 0.1 or 0.2 percentage points below 2008 shares.

2 WTO disciplines are notoriously porous. According to the Global Trade Alert database, 188 such “trade defense” measures have been implemented since November 2008.

3 In the US, for example, national policy accounted for twice as much growth in merchandise trade from 1980 to 2006 as did multilateral liberalisation. See Adler and Hufbauer (2009).

4 For example, final antidumping duties imposed by the US on May 21, 2010 on oil country tubular goods from China were 32.07% on the 39 Chinese exporters that had submitted questionnaires to the US, while the general, China-wide rate was 99.14%.

5 For example, see the commission’s report on bilateral and regional trade agreements.

6 For example, in the sixth and most recent meeting of the EU-Mexico Joint Council, the parties agreed to pursue further liberalisation “in the areas of agriculture and fishing, services and investment,” as well as “progress towards a cumulation of origin between Mexico, EU and their common Latin-American trade partners.”

7 See also the Juggernaut theory of liberalisation applied to multilateral processes by Baldwin (1994).  

8 Broda and Weinstein (2006) estimated that the variety of international goods imported into the US tripled between 1972 and 2001.

9 For a discussion of the link between fragmentation and liberalisation of intermediate trade, see Baldwin (2010).

10 For further discussion on WTO reform, see Dadush and Shaw (2011). 

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