Modern Commercial Policy: Managed Trade or Retaliation?

Wellesley College Working Paper 2002-05

39 Pages Posted: 6 Dec 2002

See all articles by Susan Skeath

Susan Skeath

Wellesley College - Department of Economics

Thomas Prusa

Rutgers University

Date Written: June 19, 2002

Abstract

In this paper we study worldwide antidumping (AD) case filing patterns in order to determine the extent to which economic versus strategic incentives explain the behavior of countries employing AD actions. We compare four main hypotheses. Two are motivated by the Bagwell-Staiger (1990) model of special protection and are consistent with the view that AD actions are used to prevent unfair trade: the "big supplier" and the "big change in imports" hypotheses. The other two hypotheses, tit-for-tat and the club effect, are outside the basic Bagwell-Staiger model and are consistent with the belief that strategic considerations influence AD actions. We find strong support that AD actions are directed at big suppliers, but far weaker evidence that AD actions are filed against suppliers whose imports have "surged." This finding casts doubt on the view that AD actions are primarily used to stop unfair trade practices because one would expect that such practices would be associated with large import gains. We also find very strong evidence that AD actions are used strategically to deter further use of AD and/or to punish trading partners who have used AD. Our findings reject the notion that the rise in AD activity is solely explained by an increase in unfair trading.

JEL Classification: F13

Suggested Citation

Skeath, Susan and Prusa, Thomas, Modern Commercial Policy: Managed Trade or Retaliation? (June 19, 2002). Wellesley College Working Paper 2002-05, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=331520 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.331520

Susan Skeath (Contact Author)

Wellesley College - Department of Economics ( email )

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Thomas Prusa

Rutgers University ( email )

Dept of Economics
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