• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Evaluating the Case for Export Subsidies
  • Contributor: Panagariya, Arvind [VerfasserIn]
  • imprint: World Bank, Washington, DC, 2000
  • Published in: Policy Research Working Paper ; No. 2276
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource
  • Language: English
  • Keywords: MARKET DISCIPLINE ; MARKET IMPERFECTIONS ; MARKET POWER ; MARKET STRUCTURE ; MATCHING GRANTS ; MORAL HAZARD ; OVERVALUATION ; PERFECT COMPETITION ; PRIVATE COSTS ; PRODUCTION COSTS ; PRODUCTIVITY ; PROFITABILITY ; REAL EXCHANGE RATE ; REAL EXCHANGE RATES ; RESERVE BANK OF INDIA ; RISK AVERSE ; RISK NEUTRAL ; SOCIAL COSTS ; SUPPLY CURVE ; TARIFF PROTECTION ; TARIFF RATES ; TARIFF REVENUE ; TERMS OF TRADE ; TRADABLE GOODS ; [...]
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Brazil
    East Asia
    East Asia and Pacific
    India
    Latin America & Caribbean
    Mexico
    South America
    South Asia
    South Asia
    English
    en_US
  • Description: Now that import-substitution policies have failed and been discredited, there has been a shift in favor of interventions on behalf of export interests. The author argues that close scrutiny reveals these arguments to be as flawed as the old arguments for import substitution. Among other things, the author concludes that: 1) Under perfect competition, a country trying to retaliate against a trading partners export subsidies by instituting its own export subsidies, will only hurt itself. 2) The argument that export subsidies may be useful for neutralizing import tariffs, is spurious. In most practical situations, this is not possible. Removal of tariffs is a far superior policy. 3) In principle, a case can be made for protecting infant export industries in the presence of externalities. But the empirical relevance of externalities remains as illusory for export industries as it was for import-substituting industries. 4) Adverse selection and moral hazard can lead to the thinning of the market for credit insurance, but that is not a case for government intervention. 5) India's experience shows export subsidies to have little impact on exports. Brazil and Mexico's experience shows export subsidies to be a costly instrument of export diversification. 6) Those who argue that pro-export interventions were important in East Asia have not provided convincing evidence of a casual relationship between the interventions and growth
  • Access State: Open Access