Dumping and Double Crossing: The (In)Effectiveness of Cost-Based Trade Policy under Incomplete Information
We argue that the rise of antidumping protection and the proliferation of voluntary export restraints (VERs) are fundamentally interrelated. We show that both can be explained by a cost-based definition of dumping when the domestic government has incomplete information about the foreign firm's costs. Given that its costs are only imperfectly observed and knowing the government's incentives to protect, efficient foreign firms will voluntarily restrain their exports prior to the antidumping investigation. In turn, the VER distorts the government's perception of the foreign firm's efficiency and leads to undesirably high duties regardless of the foreign firm's efficiency. Copyright Economics Department of the University of Pennsylvania and the Osaka University Institute of Social and Economic Research Association
Year of publication: |
2002
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Authors: | Kolev, Dobrin R. ; Prusa, Thomas J. |
Published in: |
International Economic Review. - Department of Economics. - Vol. 43.2002, 3, p. 895-918
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Publisher: |
Department of Economics |
Saved in:
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