Detection and Impact of Industrial Subsidies: The Case of World Shipbuilding

64 Pages Posted: 14 May 2014 Last revised: 22 Dec 2025

Date Written: May 2014

Abstract

This paper provides a model-based empirical strategy to, (i) detect the presence and gauge the magnitude of government subsidies and (ii) quantify their impact on production reallocation across countries, industry prices, costs and consumer surplus. I construct and estimate an industry model that allows for dynamic agents in both demand and supply and apply my strategy to world shipbuilding, a classic target of industrial policy. I find strong evidence consistent with China having intervened and reducing shipyard costs by 13-20%, corresponding to 1:5 to 4:5 billion US dollars, between 2006 and 2012. The subsidies led to substantial reallocation of ship production across the world, with Japan, in particular, losing significant market share. They also misaligned costs and production, while leading to minor surplus gains for shippers.

Suggested Citation

Kalouptsidi, Myrto, Detection and Impact of Industrial Subsidies: The Case of World Shipbuilding (May 2014). NBER Working Paper No. w20119, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2436725

Myrto Kalouptsidi (Contact Author)

Yale University ( email )

493 College St
New Haven, CT CT 06520
United States

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