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1
Historical Narrative
Richard E. Baldwin
Professor of International Economics
Graduate Institute, Geneva
2
Historical Narrative• 3 key effects: Jugger (MTNs), Domino (RTAs), RTB
(unilateralism).• “Empirical evidence” intended to “demonstrate”
usefulness of the 3 key effects.• Line sketch.• Can’t pretend to explain everything.
3
6 stylised facts1. The GATT process started when tariffs were very
high worldwide;2. Rich nations liberalised much more than poor
nations, in both the GATT process (i.e. bound rates) and RTAs;
3. The liberalisation focused on industrial goods in which two-way trade in similar goods is prevalent;
4. The process took 40 years;5. Some sectors were excluded entirely and others
experienced much less tariff cutting;6. Regional tariff cutting went hand-in-hand with
multilateral liberalisation.
4
Tariffs, 1931 & 2000Table 1: Tariffs 1931 to 2000, Europe and North America (Findlay and O’Rouke 2007).
1931 1950 Early 1960s 1976
Mid-1980s 1990 2000
European Average 30.4 17.8 14.0 8.9 6.6 8.3 4.2 Greece 39 7 8 4
Germany 18 26 13 9 7 8 4
Italy 42 25 13 9 7 8 4
United Kingdom 23 18 9 7 8 4
Austria 28 18 12 9 4
Portugal 18 8 4
France 29 18 13 9 7 8 4
Belgium 13 11 13 9 7 8 4
Netherlands 11 13 9 7 8 4
Norway 11 9 7 3
Sweden 24 9 6 5 4
Denmark 3 9 7 8 4
Spain 76 8 4
Finland 23 13 4
Switzerland 22 4 3 X
N. American Average 37 15 17 12 7 8 4 Canada 13 11 5 United States 37 15 17 11 7 6 4 Notes: See Findlay and O’Rourke for details on data sources and construction; generally the figures represent simple averages.
Source: Findlay and O’Rourke (2007 Table 9.1).
5
Tariffs, other nationsTable 1: Tariffs 1960s to 2000, Other nations (Findlay and O’Rouke 2007).
Early 1960s Mid-1980s 1990 2000 Asian Average 31 33 21 9 Indonesia 24 19 9 Philippines 46 20 7 Taiwan 30 10 6 Thailand 41 16 China 41 43 16 Korea 13 8 Japan 18 4 3 Other Nations Brazil 99 44 35 17 India 80 84 32 New Zealand 9 3 Mexico 22 17 14 17 Nigeria 36 26 Notes: See Findlay and O’Rourke for details on data sources and construction; generally the figures represent simple averages.
Source: Findlay and O’Rourke (2007 Table 9.1).
6
Historical Narrative• 1947-1958.
– GATT starts.
– Juggernaut works but stops in 1950s.
0
10
20
30
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50
60
70
1920
1922
1924
1926
1928
1930
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1956
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1964
1966
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1970
1972
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
%
Geneva Round, '47
Annecy Round, '49
Torquay Round, 51Geneva Round, 56
Kennedy Round, '67Dillon Round, 56
1934 Trade Act
7
Dominos trigger juggernauts• 1958-1972.
– EEC formation:• Europe domino effect phase I.
• Global reaction: Kennedy Round– US 1963 Trade Act changes basis of reciprocity from item-
by-item to formula.– Makes GATT reciprocity ‘stronger’ pol.ec. Force– Juggernaut starts rolling again.– Kennedy Round starts 1963– US-Canada signed the “Auto Pact” FTA but cars & parts
only.
• NB: MTNs, RTAs & unilateralism proceed in tandem.• Liberalisation begets liberalisation.
8
Dominos trigger juggernautsT
n
FE
GFOC (unil)
FE’ FE”
E”
T
n
FE
GFOC (MTN)
FE’ FE”
E’
Eo
Efinal
• EEC formation prompts a new MTN.– Kennedy quote
• Kennedy’s “Special Message to the Congress on Foreign Trade Policy,” January 25, 1962; here is the first of “five fundamentally new and sweeping developments [that] have made obsolete our traditional trade policy” (i.e. the 1934 Act) he used to argue for a stronger form of reciprocity:[1]
• “ The growth of the European Common Market - an economy which may soon nearly equal our own, protected by a single external tariff similar to our own - has progressed with such success and momentum that it has surpassed its original timetable, convinced those initially skeptical that there is now no turning back and laid the groundwork for a radical alteration of the economics of the Atlantic Alliance. Almost 90 percent of the free world's industrial production (if the United Kingdom and others successfully complete their negotiations for membership) may soon be concentrated in two great markets - the United States of America and the expanded European Economic Community. A trade policy adequate to negotiate item by item tariff reductions with a large number of small independent states will no longer be adequate to assure ready access for ourselves - and for our traditional trading partners in Canada, Japan, Latin America and elsewhere - to a market nearly as large as our own, whose negotiators can speak with one voice but whose internal differences make it impossible for them to negotiate item by item.”
9
1973-1985• EEC first
enlargement and EEC-EFTA FTAs, create another incentive for an MTN (Tokyo Round, 73-79).
• Stagflation postpones all forms of trade liberalisation.
0
10
20
30
40
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70
1920
1922
1924
1926
1928
1930
1932
1934
1936
1938
1940
1942
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1946
1948
1950
1952
1954
1956
1958
1960
1962
1964
1966
1968
1970
1972
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
%
Geneva Round, '47
Annecy Round, '49
Torquay Round, 51Geneva Round, 56
Kennedy Round, '67Dillon Round, 56
1934 Trade Act
Tokyo
10
1986-1990• Juggernaut &
domino re-engage.
• Single European Act, 1986.– EEA talks
start in ’89.
• US-Canada FTA talks start, 1986.
• Uruguay Round starts, 1986.
US & EU average applied industrial tariffs
EU
US
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
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1996
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1998
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2001
2002
2003
2004
%
Uruguary Round tariff cuts begin
NB: RTAs & MTN are starting together (again)
11
1990-1994• European spaghetti bowl forms.
– USSR collapse.
• North American spaghetti bowls forms.– US-Mexico FTA triggers massive domino effect.– NAFTA, Mercosur, dozens of spoke-spoke FTAs,
long queue for US bilaterals.
12
1990-1994• Uruguay finishes
– WTO– Coverage of new goods, agriculture, textiles and
apparel,– DSM, Rules (TRIPS, TRIMS & Services (GATS).– And about 30% tariff cut.
13
1994-2000• North American spaghetti bowls advances.
– NAFTA crushes Mexican anti-trade forces.– Mexico ‘sells’ its politically optimal tariff cuts in
over 40 bilaterals.• Japan, EU & US.
– Anti-Spoke strategies South goes RTA-mad.
• European spaghetti bowl advances.– Euro-Meds, etc.
• European spaghetti tangle gets tamed (PECS).
14
PECS• How PECS fixed the European spaghetti bowl
and why.
• Spaghetti bowl problems: – Multi ROOs (hard to do biz in spokes)– Bilateral cumulation (hinders efficient sourcing in
spokes)
• 1997, EU set up PECS: – imposed common set of ROOs on EU, EFTA &
CEECs.– Imposed diagonal cumulation.
15
PECS• Spaghetti bowl is not by accident.
– Pair-specific political economy forces => pair-specific policy; especially hub & spoke.
• Unbundling & off-shoring of manufacturing– Former beneficiaries of complexity downsized and off-shored
from EU.– Some EU firms set up in spokes and are now harmed by the
complexity (“us” becomes “them”).– EU firms push EU to tame the tangle of FTAs.
• “Spaghetti bowl as building blocs”• Complexity & unbundling create new politically
economy force – Push system the short distance from near-free trade with
matrix of bilaterals to free trade ‘lake.’– Multilateralise the FTAs.
• Domino effect in ROOs/Cumulation.
16
1986-2000• RTB unilateralism in East Asia (circa 1985).
Reductions in applied MFN tariffs on
Asian crisis
17
MTNs, RTAs & unilateralism• In 1990s, as in the 1960s & 1980s, all the ‘isms’
progress hand-in-hand.
• No evidence that ‘isms’ are substitutes.
18
Dynamic development of Noodle Bowl• FTAs spreading like wildfire, but until recently
EA only region without them.– Trigger = China’s approach to ASEAN in Nov 2000, – Domino theory but important precursors.
• Three phases of East Asian regionalism.
19
Phase I (1980s to 1990) • “Rampant unilateralism”• Unilateral tariff cutting
– competition for jobs and investment linked to development of “Factory Asia.”
• 3 key factors in development of the Asian Manufacturing Matrix
• 1. Erosion of Japan’s comparative advantage in manufacturing.– EA divides into “HQ economies” (Japan only to start with) &
“Factory Economies” (Advanced ASEANs). – Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong & Singapore join later– “Triangle trade” becomes important.
• 2. Reduced cost of moving goods and ideas. • 3. China’s emergence & domestic reforms
20
EXAMPLE: Parts Procurement of a Hard Disc Drive Assembler Located in Thailand
COVERDISKSCREWSEALRAMPTOP CLAMPLATCHPLATE CASELABELFILTERPCBASUSPENSION
Japan
SPNDLE MOTORBASECARRIAGEFLEX CABLEPIVOTSEALVCMTOP COVERPCBAHGAHAS
Thailand
BASEPIVOT SPACERVCMBASECARDTOP CLAMP DISK
COVERSCREW PIVOTPC ADPDISC
Singapore
PCBACARRIAGEHGABASEHEADSUSPENSION
DAMPING PLATECOIL SUPPORTPCBA
TOP CLAMP
DISKHEADSUSPENSION
USA
FILTER CAP
W.SUSPENSIONVCMPCBA
Malaysia Hong Kong
Taiwan
Philippines
Indonesia
China
HEAD
Mexico
21
Rampant Unilateralism
02468
101214161820
1980
1981
1982
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1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
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1994
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1997
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2000
2001
Philippine
Thailand
Korea
Malaysia
China
Indonesia
Singapore
Unilateral tariff cutting in Phases I &II.%
22
Phase II (1990 to 2000)• “Regionalism delayed”
– Acceleration of the widening and deepening of Factory Asia.
– intra-EA trade begins to matter. – Malaysian Premier Mahathir’s EAEC.
• APEC diversion.• Setting stage for Phase III:
– 1997 Asian Crisis: APEC’s hollowness & brotherhood
– China’s impeding WTO membership: end of status quo.
– A new player was joining the game; all must re-evaluate their tactics and strategies.
23
Phase III (2000 to now)• “Rampant regionalism”
• Nov 2000, Chinese premier Zhu Rongji broached the idea of an FTA between China and ASEAN at ASEAN-China summit.– Surprise move.– Why?
• ASEAN are receptive; study grp formed.
• Red lights begin to flash all over region.
24
Actual & projected “vulnerability indices”Export dependence of Column nation on row market
Japan Korea
2003
ASEAN 17% 13%
ASEAN+China 36% 43%
Japan 10%
Korea 8%
2015
ASEAN 18% 14%
ASEAN+China 47% 56%
Japan 7%
Korea 8%
Japan and Korea “HAD” to have a plan to redress ACFTA discrimination, if it should arise.
25
Japan’s options in 2000-2002• Plan A; join ACFTA
– Domino theory & history predicts, BUT– 1. ad hoc nature of ACFTA rules out enlargement (ACFTA is
not a group, so it cannot to be joined).– 2. China & ASEANs fear Japanese industry
• Lock in low-skill status? prevent development of new Sonys, Hondas, Samsungs?
• Plan B? Two classic responses– Form own trade bloc with other excluded nations.
• EFTA in 1959; Mercosur 1991.• => JKFTA
– Sign FTA with smaller partner.• Chile, Caricom with Mexico.• =>AJ FTA
26
Likely Trajectory?• Japan bilaterals with big ASEANs will get done
• Next round of dominos (if any)– Hub-hub (JK, KC, JKC)– US moves? (K US?)
• If domino theory is right, it will spread beyond EA.– cf. EU has preferences with 141 of 148 WTO
members.
27
2000-2006• Western Hemisphere spaghetti bowl
advances.– US opposition to FTAs crushed by NAFTA; – US follows promiscuous FTA strategy.
• European FTAs multiply, spokes start to proliferate FTAs.– EPAs turn more towards 1) reciprocal, 2) North-
South-South arrangements/
28
2000-2006• European FTAs multiply, spokes start to
proliferate FTAs.– EPAs turn more towards 1) reciprocal, 2) North-
South-South arrangements/
29
Staging Post 2010• Europe, North America and East Asia: ‘fuzzy’,
‘leaky’ trade blocs.– North America & Europe done deals; between &
within near-duty-free status (major flows).
• Many East Asian FTAs may have problems (typically south-south), but Japan-Malaysia, & 4 other big ASEANs very likely to be implemented.– Rest due to domino and RTB unilateralism.
• Prediction: Applied tariffs will be near zero for world’s major trade flows around 2010.
30
Fractals• Definition: “A rough or fragmented geometric
shape that can be subdivided in parts, each of which is (at least approximately) a reduced/size copy of the whole.”
• World trade system made of 3 fuzzy, leaky trade blocs each of which is made up of fuzzy leaky sub-blocs.
• The point:
• Solution to one is the solution to all (roughly).
31
ENDSee various essays by Bhagwati on:
www.VoxEU.org