Publikationsansicht

Substitutability and protectionism: Latin America’s trade policy and imports from China and India (2007)

Abstract
This paper examines the trade policy response of Latin American governments to the rapid growth of China and India in world markets. To explain higher protection in sectors where a large share is imported from these countries, we extend the ‘protection for sale’ model to allow for different degrees of substitutability between domestically produced and imported varieties. The extension suggests that higher levels of protection towards Chinese goods can be explained by high substitutability between domestically produced goods and Chinese goods, whereas lower levels of protection towards goods imported from India can be explained by low substitutability with domestically produced goods. The data supports the extension to the ‘protection for sale’ model, which performs better than the original specification in terms of explaining Latin America’s structure of protection.

Details der Publikation
Download http://eprints.otago.ac.nz/590/1/DP_0705.pdf
Herausgeber Otago University
Archiv Otago Eprints Repository (New Zealand)
Keywords HF Commerce, H Social Sciences (General), HB Economic Theory
Typ Monograph, NonPeerReviewed
Verknüpfungen http://eprints.otago.ac.nz/590/

Literaturangaben in der Publikation (3)
Protection for Sale Under Monopolistic Competition: An Empirical Investigation
The Politics of Free-Trade Agreements.
Rank Tests for Instrumental Variables Regression with Weak Instruments