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Agricultural Trade Policy and Arrangements

Agricultural Trade Policy and Arrangements. Chapter 19. Discussion Topics. Trade and welfare Why restrict trade? Trade restrictions Agricultural trade policy making The importance of preferential trading agreements Forms of economic integration. 2. Trade and Welfare.

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Agricultural Trade Policy and Arrangements

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  1. Agricultural Trade Policy andArrangements Chapter 19

  2. Discussion Topics • Trade and welfare • Why restrict trade? • Trade restrictions • Agricultural trade policy making • The importance of preferential trading agreements • Forms of economic integration 2

  3. Trade and Welfare • Autarky/closed economy – A country is self-sufficient • No trade takes place between nations • Markets are in equilibrium • Arbitrage – purchasing commodities in one market at a low price and rapidly selling them in another market at a higher price. • Partial equilibrium and excess supply – goods will always move from where prices are low (excess supply) to where prices are high (excess demand). 3 Page 370

  4. Trade and Welfare • Equilibrium price in U.S. market: PUS • Prices above PUS, → excess supply • PE: producers would supply QSUS3while consumers would only want QDUS4 $ US Market SUS Excess Supply (ES) PE 3 1 2 PUS DUS Q 4 QUS QDUS4 QSUS3 Page 371

  5. Trade and Welfare • Equilibrium price in U.S. market: PJ • Prices below PJ, → excess demand • PE: producers would only want supply QSJ3while consumers would want QDJ4 $ Japan Market SJ PJ A Excess Demand (ED) B PE Same PE as in U.S. DJ Q 5 QDJ4 QSJ3 QJ Page 371

  6. Trade and Welfare • PUS → U.S. price where ES = 0 • ES = SUS – DUS at price above PUS • PJ → Japanese price where ED = 0 • PE → World price after trade (ES = ED = QE) SJ Japan World Trade United States $ $ ES $ SUS PJ QE ED0 PE DJ QE PUS ES0 ED DUS QD QE QJ 6 Page 371

  7. Trade and Welfare • Let PJ2 = PUS2 • What happens if the price in Japan decrease to PJ2? • What happens if the price in the U.S. increases to PUS2? • At PJ2 = PUS2 → ES > ED • Thru trade, both country’s markets would be equilibrium where ED = ES at PE SJ Japan World Trade United States $ $ ES $ SUS Excess Supply Excess Demand PJ ED0 PUS2 PJ2 DJ PUS ES0 ED DUS QD QJ Page 371 7

  8. Trade and Welfare • If Japan price ↓ from PJ to PE • Japan consumer surplus ↑ by area (A+B) • Japan producer surplus ↓ by area A • If U.S. price ↑ from PUS to PE • U.S. consumer surplus ↓ by area 1 • U.S. producer surplus ↑ by area (1+2) SJ Japan World Trade United States $ $ ES $ SUS PJ ED0 B A B PE 2 PE 2 1 DJ PUS ES0 ED DUS 8 Page 371

  9. Trade and Welfare • Both countries register a net societal gain from trade • Who wins and who loses differ across country Gains From Trade 9 Page 373

  10. Why Restrict Trade? • To protect a new or infant industry • To counter unfair foreign competition • To improve the balance of payments • To protect national health, the environment or food safety 10 Page 373

  11. Trade Restrictions • Tariff barriers • Nontariff barriers (NTB) • Voluntary export restraints (VERs) • Tariff rate quotas (TRQ) • Import quotas 11 Page 375

  12. Importing Country Tariff Impact $/ton Domestic supply Sd Domestic market equilibrium 4,000 3,000 1,500 Free trade supply (SFT) ED Dd World price Q 80 20 50 Domestic demand At world price, ED = (80-20) = 60 Page377 12

  13. Importing Country Tariff Impact $/ton Sd World price plus tariff of $1,500 SFT + Tariff 3,000 ED $t 1,500 SFT Dd Q 80 60 40 20 With tariff, ED = (60-40) = 20 Page377 13

  14. Importing Country Tariff Impact $/ton Sd World price plus tariff of $1,500 G E F 3,000 SFT +Tariff $t A C D B 1,500 SFT H Dd Q World price 80 60 40 20 Page377 14

  15. Welfare Effects of a Tariff • CSbefore tariff on the previous slide was equal to Area (A+B+C+D+E+F+G) • After the tariff, the CS would fall to Area (E+F+G), or a lossof Area (A+B+C+D) • PS↑ from area Hto Area (A+H)after tariff • The tariff revenue received by the gov’t is AreaC • Dead-weight loss to society is Area (B+D) Page 377

  16. Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) • TRQ: combines two trade policy tools • Quota component: Imports entering under quota portion of a TRQ are subject to a lower (sometimes zero) tariff • Imports above the quota’s threshold face a much higher (usually prohibitive) tariff Page 377

  17. TRQ Impact on Small Nation Importer • Without trade: domestic • price of $300 • With free trade, Sd = 10, Qd = 50, QI = 40 • Assume TRQ is set at 5 tons $/ton Tariff1 = $50 Tariff2 = $50 Sd Autarkic price 300 200 SFT+Tariff2 SFT+Tariff1 100 SFT Dd Q (tons) 60 45 15 40 50 20 10 • With initial imports exceeding the imports both within and over quota rates apply • TRQ causes price to ↑ from $100/ton to $200/ton Page 380 17

  18. TRQ Impact on Small Nation Importer • TRQ causes price to ↑ from $100/ton to $200/ton • Domestic production ↑ to 20 tons • Domestic consumption ↓ to 40 tons • Imports ↓ to 20 tons Sd Dd $/ton Tariff1 = $50 Tariff2 = $50 200 SFT+Tariff2 SFT+Tariff1 100 SFT Q (tons) 60 45 15 40 50 20 10 Page 380 18

  19. TRQ Impact on Small Nation Importer • Welfare effects of TRQ • ↑ in domestic prices and ↑ in production ↑ PS to E Sd Dd $/ton Tariff1 = $50 Tariff2 = $50 200 SFT+Tariff2 C D E SFT+Tariff1 F G B A 100 SFT Q (tons) 60 45 15 25 40 50 20 10 Page 380 19

  20. TRQ Impact on Small Nation Importer • Government tariff revenue generated by TRQ = Area (A + B + C) • Government Tariff Revenue • 20 tons imported after TRQ • Area A = Gov’t tariff revenue under initial tariff = $50 x 5 tons • Area (B + C) = Gov’t tariff revenue from TRQ = $100 x 15 tons Sd Dd $/ton Tariff1 = $50 Tariff2 = $50 200 SFT+Tariff2 C 150 SFT+Tariff1 B A 100 SFT Q (tons) 60 45 15 25 40 50 20 10 Page 381 20

  21. TRQ Impact on Small Nation Importer • Windfall Profits • For 1st 5 tons imported, price = $150/ton ($100 price + $Tariff1) • Importer obtains foreign corn for $150 and sell domestically for $200 → Area D windfall profits • If exporters restrict corn shipments and raise price to $200/ton • Any portion of Area D captured by exporters represents a welfare loss to importing nation • Windfall profits generated by TRQ for domestic or foreign producers = Area D Sd Dd $/ton Tariff1 = $50 Tariff2 = $50 200 SFT+Tariff2 D 150 SFT+Tariff1 100 SFT Q (tons) 60 45 15 25 40 50 20 10 Page 381 21

  22. Welfare Effects of aTRQ • CS would ↓ by Area (E + F + D + A + C + B + G) • PS would ↑ by Area (E + D) • Tariff revenue obtained by gov’t is Area (A + B + C) • Dead-weight loss to society is Area (F + G) Sd Dd $/ton Tariff1 = $50 Tariff2 = $50 200 SFT+Tariff2 C D E SFT+Tariff1 F G B A 100 SFT 20 10 Q (tons) 60 45 15 25 40 50 Page 380 22

  23. Rationale for Export Policy • Dispose of surplus production • Limit price increases in domestic markets • Grow processing industries and employment • Limit capability of another nation • Encourage policy reforms by denying trade Page 382

  24. Examples of Economic Integration • Free trade areas • 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) • Canada, Mexico and U.S. • Free trade agreements with S. Korea, Panama, and Columbia • Signed by Pres. Obama in October 2011 • Unions: European Union and its common agricultural policy (CAP) • 27 member countries • Transferred some of their sovereignty or lawmaking authority Page 388

  25. Reasons for U.S. Preferential Trading Agreements… • Economic or political reasons tied to U.S. strategic interest • Timely reductions in barriers to trade • Counter economic and political power of other trading agreements • Reduce illegal immigration • Foster political stability and economic prosperity Page 389

  26. Impact of Trade Agreements • Lets look at trade between Mexico and the U.S. where Mexico is the small nation importer • Assume U.S. is the least cost supplier • Prior to free-trade agreement a tariff of t per unit of imports • Domestic (Mexican) production, QS1, and demand, QD1 • Quantity imported is (QD1-QS1) SM DM $ DM,SM are Mexico D & S MUS+t = supply of U.S imports w/the tariff MUS+t PM+t Quantity imported Q QS1 QD1 Page 391

  27. Impact of Trade Agreements • Lets assume a free trade area is created • Removes tariff • ↑imports from the U.S. to MUS and ↓ price to PM • Domestic (Mexican) production ↓ • Domestic (Mexican) consumption ↑ • Imports from the US ↑ to (QD2 – QS2) SM DM $ PM+t MUS+t Increased imports PM MUS Q QS1 QS2 QD1 QD2 Page 391

  28. Impact of Trade Agreements • Impacts of Free Trade Agreement of small nation tariff • Mexican CS ↑ by Area (A + B + C + D) • Mexican PS ↓ by Area A • Mexican gov’t loses tariff revenue by Area C • Total Mexican welfare gains is Area (B + D) SM DM $ PM+t MUS+t A C D B PM MUS Q QS2 QD2 Page 392

  29. Impact of Trade Diversion • Trade Diversion • Assume one has a free-trade agreement • Lower-cost imports from a non-member nation • Replaced (diverted) by higher cost imports from a member nation • Trade diversion ↓ global welfare • Shifts production from more efficient producers outside Agreement • To less efficient producers within the Agreement • Trade Diversion may result in Agreement members gaining or losing individually Page 392

  30. Impact of Trade Diversion • Trade Diversion: • Assume one has a free-trade agreement • Lower-cost imports from a non-member nation • Replaced (diverted) by higher cost imports from a member nation • Assume the following • Both the EU and the U.S. compete for the Mexican market • The EU is initially the largest supplier to the Mexican market, MEU > MUS • There is an equal tariff, t, applied to the imports from both countries Page 392

  31. Impact of Trade Diversion • Trade Diversion: • With an equal tariff, the EU is the sole exporter to Mexico because PEU+t< PUS+t • With no free trade area the price in Mexico is PEU+t • Mexican consumption: QD1, Mexican production, QS1 No trade equilibrium DM SM $ Imports from the EU = QD1 – QS1 PM PUS+t MUS+t PEU+t MEU+t PUS MUS MEU PEU Q Page 392 QM QD1 QS1

  32. Impact of Trade Diversion • Trade Diversion: • Free-Trade Agreement between Mexico and the U.S. • Remove tariff from U.S. but not EU imports • PUS is now the price in Mexico • Mexican consumption ↑ to QD2, Mexican production ↓ to QS2 • Imports from the EU ↓ to 0 and U.S. imports ↑ from 0 to QD2 - QS2 • →EU imports replaced by imports from the U.S. DM SM Imports from the US = QD2 – QS2 $ PUS+t MUS+t PEU+t MEU+t PUS MUS Q QD2 QD1 QS1 QS2 Page 392

  33. Impact of Trade Diversion • Welfare Impacts of Trade Diversion: • Consumers gain at the expense of producers and gov’t Welfare Impacts of Price ↓ $ DM SM PUS+t MUS+t MEU+t PEU+t A C B D PUS MUS E MEU PEU QD2 Q QD1 QS1 QS2 Page 393

  34. Summary • Free trade affects exporting and importing nations differently • Restrictions take the form of tariff and nontariff barriers. • PTAs can take many forms, including free trade areas and economic unions • PTAs should lead to trade creation and increased welfare of member nations. • PTAs take on political importance.

  35. World Oil Trade: China and ROW • Pw is world oil price • China demands more than supplied domestically SC China DC $ PC PW The difference (QCd-QCs) is the amount imported Q QCd QCs

  36. World Oil Trade: China and ROW • Pw is world oil price • Venezuela produces more than domestic demand Venezuela SV $ DV PW The difference (QVS-QVD) is the amount exported PC Q QVs QVd

  37. World Oil Trade: China and ROW • China and Venezuela are two economies that obviously benefit from oil trade. • A graph of all importing nations would look similar to our one for China. • A graph of all exporting nations would look similar to our one for Venezuela. • By combining exporters and importers in systematic way, we can identify an equilibrium world price.

  38. World Oil Trade: China and ROW Crude Oil Exporter Excess Supply P $ ES = Amounts Oil Exporters PNT De Se Q Q Export (Trade) Potential

  39. World Oil Trade: China and ROW • Why is crude oil Excess Supply (ES) upward sloping? • At higher and higher prices, exporting nations not bound by OPEC production constraints start producing more oil • Exploration increases • Stocks (inventories) decline • Domestic consumption declines at higher prices

  40. World Oil Trade: China and ROW ES $ ES PNT = Amounts ED Sm Dm Oil Importers Trade

  41. World Oil Trade: China and ROW • Why is crude oil Excess Demand (ED)downward sloping? • As prices rise, importers demand less (i.e., people start driving less, purchasing hybrids) • As prices rise, suppliers in importing region increase output. (i.e., U.S. oil production rises.)

  42. World Oil Trade: China and ROW World price determined where ES = ED P P P ES Pw ED Dm Sm De Se Qt Q Oil Importers Oil Exporters Trade

  43. World Oil Trade: China and ROW • Let's work through some examples using the above model of trade • The emerging tiger • Former Vice-President Gore: Tax what you burn, not what you earn policy. • How could a hurricane cause gasolinesprices to rise while at the same time cause crude oil prices to fall at the same time?

  44. World Oil Trade: China and ROW Impact of China’s growing economy P P P ES Q*t P*w Qt Pw ED* ED SC DC De Se QT Q*T Q China Oil Exporters Trade

  45. World Oil Trade: China and ROW Impact of Global Carbon Tax Pre-Tax Equilibrium P P P D*e ES ES* Pw P*w ED DC ED* SC De Q*T QT Se D*C Q China Trade Oil Exporters

  46. World Oil Trade: China and ROW Carbon Tax on World Oil Markets • Downward pressure on world oil prices • Reduce greenhouse gases • Increase demand for non-carbon energy sources: Wind, geothermal, solar, etc.

  47. Katrina Impacts on World Oil Markets • Shuts down oil supply into the US • a left shift of the import demand for oil by a major importer, the U.S. • →An excess supply available to ROW’s importers • Decreases world crude oil prices • Shuts down gasoline refineries leaving U.S. consumers with less gas supply • → a left shift in the supply of gasoline to the U.S. retail market • Increased domestic retail gasoline price

  48. World Oil Trade: U.S. and ROW Impact of Hurricane Katrina P P P ES P*w Pw ED ED* SC DC De Se QT Q*T Q U.S. Oil Exporters Trade

  49. World Oil Trade: U.S. and ROW Impact of Katrina on U.S. Retail Gasoline Market P The supply curve shifts up due to lack of ability to access enough crude oil feedstock to produce QRG S* S P*RG PRG D Q QRG Q*RG

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