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SMU SOE Seminar (Jul 26, 2017): Sensitive Sectors in Free Trade Agreements
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TOPIC:
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SENSITIVE SECTORS IN FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
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ABSTRACT
This paper documents the presence of “sensitive sectors” in Free Trade Agreements, defined as sectors for which the within-FTA tariffs remain positive. The paper includes some brief theoretical discussion of the welfare implications of these, but the main emphasis is on reporting two measures of this phenomenon for countries in FTAs that entered into force between 1994 and 2003. One measure is the percentage of tariff lines that remain dutiable, and the second is the change, from before the FTA to after, in the average maximum (across 6-digit products) positive tariffs. Both measures are derived from data in the UNCTAD TRAINS database, and are then related to measures of country characteristics that might explain them. Low per capita GDP countries tend to have larger fractions of dutiable tariff lines, while higher income countries tend to post larger increases in average maximum positive tariffs. Both suggest that the favored treatment of sensitive sectors is undermining the potential gains from trade that FTAs provide.
Keywords: Free trade agreement, Sensitive sectors
JEL Classification: F13
Click here to view the paper.
Click here to view his CV.
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PRESENTER
Alan Deardorff
University of Michigan
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RESEARCH FIELDS
International Trade Theory and Policy
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DATE:
26 July 2017 (Wednesday)
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TIME:
4pm - 5.30pm
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VENUE:
Meeting Room 5.1, Level 5
School of Economics
Singapore Management University
90 Stamford Road
Singapore 178903
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