How Sensitive Are Latin American Exports to Chinese Competition in the U.S. Market?

This paper estimates the elasticity of substitution of U.S. imports using detailed trade data over the 1990-2003 period. The authors use a two-stage least squares framework in order to identify the elasticity parameter of interest. The authors use the elasticity estimates to assess the extent to which Latin American and Chinese goods compete in the U.S. market by providing forecasts of how alternative policy scenarios may affect exports to the United States. The analysis considers the following scenarios: (i) currency revaluation in China; (ii) elimination of U.S. tariffs on Latin American exports under a hemispheric free trade agreement; and (iii) the elimination of quotas on apparel and textile exports under the Multi-Fiber Agreement. The findings show that a 20-percent appreciation of the renminbi reduces Chinese exports to the United States by a fifth, although since other regions increase sales to that market (0.5 percent for Latin America), U.S. imports decline by only 1.7 percent. Hemispheric free trade would increase Latin America's exports to the United States by around 3 percent. The removal of the quotas would lead to a sharp increase in Chinese sales to the United States (40 percent), but Latin America would see its share of the U.S. market decline by around 2 percent (2.5 percentage points). China's gains would come mainly at the expense of other regions of the world.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: López-Córdova, J. Ernesto, Micco, Alejandro, Molina, Danielken
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2008-01
Subjects:ADVERSE EFFECTS, AGGREGATE TRADE, AGRICULTURE, APPAREL, APPAREL EXPORTS, APPAREL GOODS, APPAREL PRODUCTS, AVERAGE TARIFF, AVERAGE TARIFFS, BILATERAL TRADE, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, CAPITAL REQUIREMENT, CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS, CAPITAL SHARE, CENTRAL AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICAN, COMMODITY PRICE, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, COMPETITIVENESS, CONSTANT ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION, CONSUMER PRICE, CONSUMERS, COUNTRY OF ORIGIN, CURRENCY, CUSTOMS, DEMAND ELASTICITY, DEMAND FOR GOODS, DEMAND FUNCTION, DEVELOPMENT BANK, ECONOMIC EFFECTS, ELASTICITY, ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION, ELIMINATION OF TARIFFS, EQUILIBRIUM, EQUIPMENT, EXPENDITURE, EXPENDITURES, EXPORT DYNAMISM, EXPORT GROWTH, EXPORT PERFORMANCE, EXPORTERS, EXPORTS, FACTOR PRICES, FAIR, FINANCIAL SECTOR, FORECASTS, FREE TRADE, FREE TRADE AGREEMENT, FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS, FREE TRADE AREA, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM, GRAVITY FRAMEWORK, GROWTH RATE, HOLDING, IMPORT DATA, IMPORT QUOTA, IMPORT QUOTAS, IMPORT SHARE, IMPORT TARIFFS, IMPORT VALUE, INPUT PRICES, INSTRUMENT, INTERMEDIATE GOODS, INTERMEDIATE INPUTS, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERNATIONAL FINANCE, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION, LATIN AMERICAN, LOW TARIFFS, MARGINAL COSTS, MARKET ACCESS, MARKET SHARE, MARKET SHARES, METAL PRODUCTS, PREFERENTIAL ACCESS, PREFERENTIAL TARIFF, PREFERENTIAL TRADE, PRICE CHANGES, PRICE EFFECT, PRICE ELASTICITY, PRICE INDEX, PRICE LEVEL, PRICE OF IMPORTS, PRICE TRENDS, PRODUCER PRICE, QUOTAS, REGIONAL INTEGRATION, SALES, SOUTH AMERICA, SOUTH AMERICAN, SUPPLIER, TARIFF ELIMINATION, TARIFF EQUIVALENT, TARIFF LINE, TARIFF LINES, TARIFF PREFERENCES, TARIFF REDUCTION, TEXTILE IMPORTS, TRADE AGREEMENT, TRADE AGREEMENTS, TRADE DATA, TRADE IMPEDIMENTS, TRADE PARTNER, TRADE PATTERNS, TRADE POLICIES, TRADE POLICY, TRANSPORT COSTS, URUGUAY ROUND, UTILITY FUNCTION, VALUE ADDED, VALUE OF EXPORTS, VALUE OF IMPORTS, VOLUME OF TRADE, WAGES, WORLD MARKETS, WORLD TRADE, WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/01/8973089/sensitive-latin-american-exports-chinese-competition-market
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/6378
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