Moving Forward Faster : Trade Facilitation Reform and Mexican Competitiveness

Improved competitiveness is at the top of the agenda for Mexico as it moves to leverage economic progress made over the past decade. The authors evaluate the impact of changes in trade facilitation measures on trade for main industrial sectors in Mexico. They use four indicators of trade facilitation: port efficiency, customs environment, regulatory environment, and e-commerce use by business (as a proxy for service sector infrastructure). The authors use gravity model results to consider how much trade among countries might be increased under various scenarios of improved trade facilitation. They follow a simulation strategy that uses a formula to design a unique program of reform for each country in the sample, and apply it to the case of Mexico. The formula brings the below-average countries in the group half-way to the average for the entire set of countries. After simulating these improvements in trade facilitation in all four areas, the authors find that the total increase in trade flow in manufacturing goods is estimated to be $348.2 billion (about 7.4 percent of total world trade). The analysis indicates that Mexico has a large scope for trade promotion from trade facilitation reform: overall increments from domestic reforms are expected to be on the order of $31.8 billion, equivalent to 22.4 percent of total Mexican manufacturing exports for 2000-03. On the imports side, these figures are $17.1 billion and 11.2 percent, respectively. In total exports as well as in textiles, increases in exports result from improvements in port efficiency and the regulatory environment (that is, the perception of corruption). In turn, exports of transport equipment are expected to get a greater increment from improvements in port efficiency, whereas exports of food and machinery seem to be more related to improvements in the regulatory environment. On the imports side, Mexican improvements in port efficiency appear to be the most important factor, although for imports of transport equipment improvements in service sector infrastructure are also of relative importance.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soloaga, Isidro, Wilson, John S., Mejía, Alejandro
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2006-06
Subjects:AGGREGATE TRADE, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS, AGRICULTURE, AIM, AIR TRANSPORT, APPLIED TARIFF, AVERAGE TRADE, BENCHMARKS, BILATERAL TRADE, CAPACITY BUILDING, CARGO, CHANGES IN TRADE, COMMODITIES, COMMODITY, CUSTOMS, CUSTOMS CLEARANCE, CUSTOMS PROCEDURES, DEMAND ELASTICITY, DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY, ECONOMIC PROGRESS, ECONOMIC RESEARCH, ECONOMIC SECTORS, ELASTICITY OF TRADE, EXPORT GROWTH, EXPORT PERFORMANCE, EXPORT PERMITS, EXPORTERS, EXPORTS, EXTERNALITIES, FOOD EXPORTS, FREE TRADE, FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS, GATT, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS, GLOBAL IMPORTS, GLOBAL MARKETS, GLOBAL TRADE, GRAVITY EQUATION, GRAVITY ESTIMATES, GRAVITY MODEL, GRAVITY MODEL APPROACH, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, GROWTH RATE, HARMONIZATION, IMPORT BARRIERS, IMPORT PRICES, INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICIES, LOW TARIFF, MANUFACTURING, MARKET SIZE, MEASURE OF TRADE, MORE, NON-TARIFF BARRIERS, PATTERN OF TRADE, POLITICAL ECONOMY, PREFERENTIAL TRADE, PREFERENTIAL TRADE ARRANGEMENTS, PRICE INDEX, REGIONAL TRADE, REGIONAL TRADE ARRANGEMENTS, RETAIL TRADE, SHIPPING, SHIPPING COSTS, TARIFF BARRIERS, TARIFF DATA, TARIFF LEVELS, TARIFF LINE, TARIFF RATE, TARIFF RATES, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, TEXTILE IMPORTS, TRADE, TRADE BARRIERS, TRADE COSTS, TRADE FACILITATION, TRADE FLOW DATA, TRADE FLOWS, TRADE PARTNERS, TRADE POLICY, TRADE PROMOTION, TRADE REGULATIONS, TRADE VALUES, TRADE VARIABLES, TRAINS, TRANSIT, TRANSPORT COSTS, TRANSPORT SERVICES, UNILATERAL REFORM, UNILATERAL REFORMS, UNILATERAL TRADE, WHOLESALE PRICE INDEX, WORLD MARKETS, WORLD TRADE, WTO,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/06/6875041/moving-forward-faster-trade-facilitation-reform-mexican-competitiveness
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8403
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Summary:Improved competitiveness is at the top of the agenda for Mexico as it moves to leverage economic progress made over the past decade. The authors evaluate the impact of changes in trade facilitation measures on trade for main industrial sectors in Mexico. They use four indicators of trade facilitation: port efficiency, customs environment, regulatory environment, and e-commerce use by business (as a proxy for service sector infrastructure). The authors use gravity model results to consider how much trade among countries might be increased under various scenarios of improved trade facilitation. They follow a simulation strategy that uses a formula to design a unique program of reform for each country in the sample, and apply it to the case of Mexico. The formula brings the below-average countries in the group half-way to the average for the entire set of countries. After simulating these improvements in trade facilitation in all four areas, the authors find that the total increase in trade flow in manufacturing goods is estimated to be $348.2 billion (about 7.4 percent of total world trade). The analysis indicates that Mexico has a large scope for trade promotion from trade facilitation reform: overall increments from domestic reforms are expected to be on the order of $31.8 billion, equivalent to 22.4 percent of total Mexican manufacturing exports for 2000-03. On the imports side, these figures are $17.1 billion and 11.2 percent, respectively. In total exports as well as in textiles, increases in exports result from improvements in port efficiency and the regulatory environment (that is, the perception of corruption). In turn, exports of transport equipment are expected to get a greater increment from improvements in port efficiency, whereas exports of food and machinery seem to be more related to improvements in the regulatory environment. On the imports side, Mexican improvements in port efficiency appear to be the most important factor, although for imports of transport equipment improvements in service sector infrastructure are also of relative importance.