International Business Chapter 11 Country Responsibility Aside From Consumers Unions And Corporations The Trade Laws Provide

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subject Authors Alan M. Taylor, Robert C. Feenstra

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Suppose a tariff in the amount of t dollars is applied on all importers before NAFTA.
Then the United States imports Q1 units of auto parts at a price of PAsia + t given by point
A, where the quantity Q2 is supplied by Mexico with the remaining amount arriving from
Asia (i.e., Q1Q2). The tariff revenue collected from the Q1 units of import is area (a + b
+ c + d), of which the amount given by area a is from Mexico.
Interpretation of the Loss Thus, the net effect of the regional trade agreement on the
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United States and Mexico is negative. In particular, the loss in tariff revenue to the
United States outweighs the gain to Mexico from being able to import duty-free to the
latter. The net loss denoted by area c results from diverting trade from a more efficient
Not All Trade Diversion Creates a Loss It should be noted that the result of the
previous example is not a necessary condition. Namely, members of a regional trade
agreement may experience gains from removing a tariff despite any trade diversions. To
Gain in consumer surplus: +(a + b + c + d + e)
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APPLICATION
Trade Creation and Diversion for Canada
The gains and losses for Canada from joining the Canada‒U.S. Free Trade Agreement
(CUSFTA) are examined by economist Daniel Trefler. Using data from 1989 to 1996,
Trefler found that the reduction in Canadian tariffs on U.S. goods increased imports by
3 International Agreements on Labor Issues
In addition to issues regarding tariffs and trade, regional agreements also deal with labor
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exploiting workers in “sweatshop” conditions. Unions also rally for improved labor
How to Promote Labor Standards Enforcement of labor standards also occurs outside
of international agreements. Pressures from unions and grassroots organizations can
Consumer Responsibility Table 11-2 presents the responses to a survey conducted by
the National Bureau of Economic Research questioning people on their attitudes toward
the working conditions of the production of a product. Although most respondents
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Corporate Responsibility Due to pressures from consumers and unions, corporations
such as Walmart are insisting that factories in China meet strict guidelines on both labor
and environmental standards.
Nonetheless, such monitoring by corporation and governments alike is often inadequate
H E A D L I N E S
Walmart Orders Chinese Suppliers to Lift Standards
In order to improve its reputation, Walmart has recently required its more than 1,000
Chinese suppliers to meet strict environmental and social standards. Suppliers are
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required to demonstrate compliance with Chinese environmental laws, improve energy
efficiency, and disclose the names and locations of all factories involved in production.
Country Responsibility Aside from consumers, unions, and corporations, the U.S. trade
laws provide the president with the power to deny trading privileges to countries that lack
proper labor standards. Withholding trade from a country that violates the basic rights of
H E A D L I N E S
American Tariffs, Bangladeshi Deaths
It is argued that one effective means to address the poor safety conditions and low wages,
and to improve working conditions, at factories like the Bangladeshi plant where a fire
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remain competitive globally. Currently, they are using labor-saving measures such as
holding down wages and scrimping on working conditions to just stay in business.
H E A D L I N E S
United States Suspends Bangladesh’s Preferential Trade Status
The United States suspended its preferential trade with Bangladesh as an apparent
punitive move following the garment factory collapse that killed over 1,000 workers in
2013. The move ousts Bangladesh from a South Asian agreement that removes import
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Living Wage The issue of whether foreign workers should receive a wage above the
norm in the developing country is controversial partly because of the difficulties in
4 International Agreements on the Environment
The WTO indirectly affects the environment, unlike the 200 multilateral environmental
agreements that specifically deal with environmental issues.
Environment Issues in the GATT and WTO
The “green provision,” or Article XX of the GATT, states that countries are allowed to
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TunaDolphin Case In response to the U.S. ban on tuna imported from its southern
neighbor, Mexico filed a case against the United States with the GATT (former WTO) in
ShrimpTurtle Case In 1996, four Asian countries (India, Malaysia, Pakistan, and
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Thailand) brought a case to the WTO to appeal the U.S. ban on shrimp caught without the
use of turtle-safe nets. Although the WTO ruled against the United States as in the tuna
Gasoline from Venezuela and Brazil In the case against the United States concerning
Biotech Food in Europe In 2006, the United States, along with Argentina and Canada,
Summary of GATT/WTO Cases The outcomes of the cases presented in Table 11-3
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Does Trade Help or Harm the Environment?
We will examine some examples to understand how the environment could be helped and
harmed by trade.
Externalities A positive or negative externality occurs when one person’s or firm’s
consumption or production of a good affects another person or society positively (R&D
or education) or negatively (pollution). It leads to a market failure because the
Externalities and Trade Free trade may either harm or benefit the environment. We will
now turn to showing how sometimes trade reduces an externality and raises welfare, and
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sometimes less trade would benefit the environment.
When trade opens, the gains from trade due to the fall in price consumer surplus increase
Negative Production Externalities In Figure 11-4, we will let the social supply curve
include the additional social marginal costs to society of producing each unit of the good.
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This supply curve (SMC) then includes both the private marginal costs and social
marginal costs of the externality produced. It is measured by the vertical distance
Notice that if Foreign increases output as a result of Home’s decrease, Foreign’s increase
in social external costs could offset Home’s decrease, resulting in no change for world
gains.
Negative Consumption Externalities Negative externalities that arise from consumption
imply that the true consumer benefits of consuming this good must include the negative
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But, the real price that includes the negative social benefits is below PW, where D1
This increase in the social costs of area is a loss for the country and must be added to
U.S. Trade Restriction in Sugar and Ethanol Because of the import quota on sugar,
American consumers and firms pay up to double the world price. The higher price causes
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U.S. Automobile VER The “voluntary” export restraint (VER) on Japanese cars sold to
the United States led automobile manufacturers to export more luxurious models, larger
in engine size and weight. Consequently, the average gas mileage of the imported
The Tragedy of the Commons The relationship between free trade and the environment
can also be negative, as we will see in the next examples.
Trade in Fish Because fish in the ocean are a common property that anyone can
harvest, competition over this resource leads to overfishing, which results in the tragedy
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Trade in Buffalo A recent research study indicated that international trade contributed to
the slaughter of the Great Plains buffalo to near-extinction between 1870 and 1880.
Following a tanning invention in 1871 that allowed the buffalo hide to be used
industrially, the import demand for untanned hides grew significantly in Europe, as
illustrated in Figure 11-6.

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