CitedEvidence
User Settings

Protection for a small country

Neil Vousden-1990-06-29-Cambridge University Press eBooks
0

TL;DRAbstract

In the modern world, national governments have at their disposal a wide range of policies for restricting international trade and protecting domestic industries. These include production subsidies, price support schemes, tariffs on imports, export subsidies and taxes, import quotas and local content schemes. Some of these policies also serve as sources of government revenue. In this chapter and the next we analyse a range of these policies in the competitive framework of the HOS model developed in Chapter 1. Because the case of tariffs is sufficient to illustrate all of the basic principles, we look at tariffs first. However, later we consider some of the many other policies which are frequently used. These non-tariff distortions to trade have in recent years assumed increasing importance as the principal impediments to free trade while tariffs themselves have been negotiated to a very low level.

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

In the modern world, national governments have at their disposal a wide range of policies for restricting international trade and protecting domestic industries. These include production subsidies, price support schemes, tariffs on imports, export subsidies and taxes, import quotas and local content schemes. Some of these policies also serve as sources of government revenue. In this chapter and the next we analyse a range of these policies in the competitive framework of the HOS model developed in Chapter 1. Because the case of tariffs is sufficient to illustrate all of the basic principles, we look at tariffs first. However, later we consider some of the many other policies which are frequently used. These non-tariff distortions to trade have in recent years assumed increasing importance as the principal impediments to free trade while tariffs themselves have been negotiated to a very low level.

Keywords

Business

Chat

Click to start Chat