Uniform versus discriminatory tariffs

Files

RA_hdl_108457.pdf (257.47 KB)
  (Restricted Access)

Date

2011

Authors

Hashimzade, N.
Khodavaisi, H.
Myles, G.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Review of Development Economics, 2011; 15(3):403-416

Statement of Responsibility

Nigar Hashimzade, Hassan Khodavaisi, and Gareth D. Myles

Conference Name

Abstract

We analyze the non-cooperative interaction between two exporting countries producing differentiated products and one importing country when governments use optimal policies to maximize welfare. The analysis includes product differentiation, asymmetric costs, and Bertrand competition. For identical exporting countries we demonstrate that the importing country always prefers a uniform tariff regime while both exporting countries prefer a discriminatory tariff regime for any degree of product differentiation. If countries are asymmetric in terms of production cost then the higher-cost exporter always prefers the discriminatory regime but the lower-cost exporter prefers the uniform regime if there is a significant cost differential. With cost asymmetry the announcement of a uniform tariff regime by the importer is not a credible strategy since there is an incentive to deviate to discrimination. This implies an international body can play a role in ensuring that tariff agreements are respected.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2011 Blackwell Publishing

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record