Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)

Recent studies on the economic effects of trade liberalization and economic integration have emphasized the significant gains associated with product differentiation and scale economies. Securing access to markets in other countries will make it possible to increase product variety and capture scale...

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Main Author: 이, 홍구
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Development Institute 1992-07-01
Series:KDI Journal of Economic Policy
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.23895/kdijep.1992.14.2.29
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author 이, 홍구
author_facet 이, 홍구
author_sort 이, 홍구
collection DOAJ
description Recent studies on the economic effects of trade liberalization and economic integration have emphasized the significant gains associated with product differentiation and scale economies. Securing access to markets in other countries will make it possible to increase product variety and capture scale economies, thus, expanding the gains from trade. Liberalization is also expected to introduce foreign competition into the previously closed market. Concurrently, the liberalization will improve the competitive market environment for firms selling in the domestic market. Firms will be pressed to either exit or reduce cost. The output per firm, then, will increase due to the exit of rival firms, and the average total cost will decline due to the economies of scale. 'Rationalization' of the production process will eventually follow. This paper addresses the economic effects of (counterfactual) bilateral tariff elimination between Korea and Japan. It computationally assesses the gains from liberalization as well as the resource allocations and welfare effects associated with the tariff reduction. The endogenous determination of the key parameters distinguishes this paper from others. The firm's perceived elasticity of demand and elasticity of substitution in the present model are calibrated to be consistent with the base year data. Korea, Japan, and the rest of the world are modeled explicitly. The sectoral coverage of the model includes twenty-three tradable product categories based on three-digit SITC industries and seven nontradable categories based on one-digit SITC industries. Product categories are also classified into perfectly competitive and imperfectly competitive ones. In the imperfectly competitive industries, product differentiation exists at the firm level, while the perfectly competitive industries are characterized by national product differentiation. The simulation results of bilateral tariff reduction are reported. Tariff elimination tends to increase intra-industry trade flows so that the total amount of exports and imports of both countries expand. Yet, Japan is expected to increase the bilateral trade surplus in the wake of the mutual tariff reduction. Terms-of-trade for Korea will not change, while for Japan it will deteriorate. Equivalent variations reflecting the change in consumer surplus (welfare) will favor Korean consumers. Total output, however, will not change substantially, recording 0.5 and 0.6% for Japan and Korea, respectively. An interesting finding in the analysis is that the gains from increased competition and scale efficiency are not as prevailing as expected in theory.
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spelling doaj.art-81ddcab88b11441d963cfb7ca61f67de2022-12-21T20:17:07ZengKorea Development InstituteKDI Journal of Economic Policy2586-29952586-41301992-07-01142295410.23895/kdijep.1992.14.2.29Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)이, 홍구Recent studies on the economic effects of trade liberalization and economic integration have emphasized the significant gains associated with product differentiation and scale economies. Securing access to markets in other countries will make it possible to increase product variety and capture scale economies, thus, expanding the gains from trade. Liberalization is also expected to introduce foreign competition into the previously closed market. Concurrently, the liberalization will improve the competitive market environment for firms selling in the domestic market. Firms will be pressed to either exit or reduce cost. The output per firm, then, will increase due to the exit of rival firms, and the average total cost will decline due to the economies of scale. 'Rationalization' of the production process will eventually follow. This paper addresses the economic effects of (counterfactual) bilateral tariff elimination between Korea and Japan. It computationally assesses the gains from liberalization as well as the resource allocations and welfare effects associated with the tariff reduction. The endogenous determination of the key parameters distinguishes this paper from others. The firm's perceived elasticity of demand and elasticity of substitution in the present model are calibrated to be consistent with the base year data. Korea, Japan, and the rest of the world are modeled explicitly. The sectoral coverage of the model includes twenty-three tradable product categories based on three-digit SITC industries and seven nontradable categories based on one-digit SITC industries. Product categories are also classified into perfectly competitive and imperfectly competitive ones. In the imperfectly competitive industries, product differentiation exists at the firm level, while the perfectly competitive industries are characterized by national product differentiation. The simulation results of bilateral tariff reduction are reported. Tariff elimination tends to increase intra-industry trade flows so that the total amount of exports and imports of both countries expand. Yet, Japan is expected to increase the bilateral trade surplus in the wake of the mutual tariff reduction. Terms-of-trade for Korea will not change, while for Japan it will deteriorate. Equivalent variations reflecting the change in consumer surplus (welfare) will favor Korean consumers. Total output, however, will not change substantially, recording 0.5 and 0.6% for Japan and Korea, respectively. An interesting finding in the analysis is that the gains from increased competition and scale efficiency are not as prevailing as expected in theory.https://doi.org/10.23895/kdijep.1992.14.2.29
spellingShingle 이, 홍구
Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)
KDI Journal of Economic Policy
title Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)
title_full Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)
title_fullStr Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)
title_full_unstemmed Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)
title_short Economic Effects of Eliminating Trade Barriers under Imperfect Competition (Written in Korean)
title_sort economic effects of eliminating trade barriers under imperfect competition written in korean
url https://doi.org/10.23895/kdijep.1992.14.2.29
work_keys_str_mv AT ihonggu economiceffectsofeliminatingtradebarriersunderimperfectcompetitionwritteninkorean