Dirty Exports and Environmental Regulation: Do Standards Matter to Trade?

How to address the link between environmental regulation and trade was an important part of discussions at the World Trade Organization Ministerial in Doha, Qatar in November 2001. Trade ministers agreed to launch negotiations on trade and the environment, specifically clarification of WTO rules. The authors address an important part of the background context for deciding whether or how to link trade agreements to the environment from a developing country perspective. The authors ask whether environmental regulations affect exports of pollution-intensive or "dirty" goods in 24 countries between 1994 and 1998. Based on a Heckscher-Ohlin-Vanek (HOV) model, net exports in five pollution-intensive industries are regressed on factor endowments and measures of environmental standards (legislation in force). The results suggest that, if country heterogeneity such as enforcement of environmental regulations is controlled for, more stringent environmental standards imply lower net exports of metal mining, nonferrous metals, iron, and steel and chemicals. The authors find find that a trade agreement on a common environmental standard will cost a non-OECD country substantially more than an OECD country. Developing countries will, on average, reduce exports of the five pollution-intensive products by 0.37 percent of GNP. This represents 11 percent of annual exports of these products from the 24 studied countries.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wilson, John S., Tsunehiro Otsuki, Sewadeh, Mirvat
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2002-03
Subjects:ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS & PROTOCOLS, WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION, TRADE NEGOTIATIONS, TRADE AGREEMENTS, POLLUTION INTENSITY, ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARDS, EXPORT PERFORMANCE, METALS EXPORT-IMPORT TRADE, NONFERROUS METALS, IRON, STEEL MANUFACTURING, CHEMICAL INDUSTRY ABATEMENT COSTS, AGRICULTURE, AIR POLLUTANTS, AIR POLLUTION, ARABLE LAND, ARSENIC, BILATERAL TRADE, CERTIFIED COMPANIES, CHEMICAL INDUSTRY, CHLORINE, CLEAN AIR, CLEANING, COAL, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, COMPETITIVENESS, CONSERVATION, CONSERVATION OF NATURE, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DIRECT INVESTMENT, DOMESTIC POLICY, ECONOMETRICS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC RESEARCH, ECONOMICS RESEARCH, EMISSION STANDARDS, EMISSIONS, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, EMPIRICAL RESEARCH, EMPLOYMENT, ENDOGENOUS VARIABLES, ENFORCEMENT MEASURES, ENFORCEMENT MECHANISM, ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS, ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS, ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS, ENVIRONMENTAL DIMENSIONS, ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS, ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS, ENVIRONMENTAL ENFORCEMENT, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS, ENVIRONMENTAL LAW, ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS, ENVIRONMENTAL LEGISLATION, ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE, ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES, ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION, ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS, ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARD, ENVIRONMENTAL STRATEGIES, ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, EXPENDITURES, EXPORTS, FREE TRADE, GAS, GDP, GNP, HIGH LEVELS, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, IMPORTS, INCOME, INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, LABOR FORCE, LAND DISPOSAL, LEGISLATION, MANUFACTURING PLANT, METALS, MIGRATION, NATIONAL BORDERS, NATIONAL OUTPUT, NATURAL RESOURCES, NET EXPORTS, OIL, OZONE, OZONE LAYER, PAPER INDUSTRY, POLICY INSTRUMENTS, POLLUTION, POLLUTION ABATEMENT, POLLUTION HAVENS, POLLUTION PREVENTION, POLLUTION REGULATION, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRODUCTION PROCESSES, RAW MATERIALS, RECYCLING, SCREENING, SOLID WASTE, SULFURIC ACID, TOTAL COSTS, TOXIC CHEMICALS, TRADE ORGANIZATION, TRANSITION ECONOMIES, TREATIES, VALUE ADDED, WASTE DISPOSAL, WASTEWATER, WATER POLLUTION, WATER RESOURCES, WEALTH, WORKERS, WTO, ZINC,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/03/1743997/dirty-exports-environmental-regulation-standards-matter-trade
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14330
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!