Emerging Economies and the Emergence of South-South Protectionism

Do exports resume when import-restricting temporary trade barriers such as antidumping are finally removed? To establish the importance of this question for emerging economies, this paper uses newly available data from the World Bank's Temporary Trade Barriers Database to update a number of inter-temporal indicators of import protection along three dimensions: additional time coverage through 2011, additional policy-imposing country coverage, and a more comprehensive depiction of impacted trading partner coverage. It then turns to the emerging economy exporters affected by temporary trade barriers and highlights the economic significance of frequently bilateral import restrictions imposed by other emerging economies, i.e., South-South protectionism. Finally, it then investigates empirically whether country-level exports resume when the previously imposed -- but temporary -- import protection is finally removed. China's exporters respond quickly and aggressively to the market access opening embodied in the removal of such import restrictions. This differs markedly from the slow and tepid export response of other emerging economies, especially when the import protection had been imposed by another emerging economy trading partner. This evidence suggests a previously unidentified long-run cost associated with such South-South protectionism that merits further research and inquiry.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bown, Chad P.
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-08
Subjects:ANTIDUMPING, ANTIDUMPING ACTIONS, ANTIDUMPING CASES, ANTIDUMPING DUTIES, ANTIDUMPING DUTY, ANTIDUMPING POLICY, BARRIER, BENCHMARK, BILATERAL IMPORTS, BILATERAL TRADE, CHECKS, CONSUMER PRICE INDEX, DEFLATORS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES, DUMPING, ECONOMIC CRISIS, ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, ECONOMIC TRENDS, EMERGING ECONOMIES, EMERGING ECONOMY, EMERGING MARKET, EMERGING MARKETS, EXCHANGE RATE, EXCHANGE RATE FLUCTUATIONS, EXPORT GROWTH, EXPORT MARKET, EXPORT MARKET SHARE, EXPORT MARKETS, EXPORT SALES, EXPORT SHARE, EXPORT SHARES, EXPORT VOLUMES, EXPORTER, EXPORTERS, EXPORTS, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FIXED COSTS, FOREIGN MARKET, FUTURE RESEARCH, GDP, GLOBAL ECONOMY, GOVERNMENT POLICY, GROWTH RATE, IMPORT DATA, IMPORT MARKETS, IMPORT PRODUCT, IMPORT PRODUCTS, IMPORT PROTECTION, IMPORT RESTRICTION, IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, IMPORT STATISTICS, IMPORT TARIFFS, IMPORT VALUES, INCOME, INCOME TRADING, INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES, INSTRUMENT, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS, LIBERALIZATION, MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS, MARKET ACCESS, MARKET SHARE, MARKET SHARES, MONETARY FUND, MULTILATERAL DISCIPLINES, POLICY RESPONSE, PROTECTIONISM, RECESSION, TEMPORAL TRADE, TRADE AGREEMENTS, TRADE BARRIER, TRADE BARRIERS, TRADE DATA, TRADE DEFLECTION, TRADE EFFECTS, TRADE FLOWS, TRADE POLICIES, TRADE POLICY, TRADE PROTECTION, TRADING, TRADING SYSTEM, VALUE OF IMPORTS, WORLD ECONOMY, WORLD TRADE, WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION, WORLD TRADING SYSTEM, WTO,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/08/16592674/emerging-economies-emergence-south-south-protectionism
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12003
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