On the Size and Number of Regional Integration Arrangements: A Political Economy Model

37 Pages Posted: 30 Aug 1999

Date Written: May 1999

Abstract

Will the current wave of regional integration arrangements lead to the world being divided into competing inward-looking trading blocs? Or will it lead to a more open multilateral trading system? Using a multicountry political economy model, and after having shown that global free trade is optimal, I investigate the possibility of achieving it through regionalism.

An outsider country considering entering a trading block must weigh the tradeoff between the costs of opening its own market to more foreign competition and the gains from getting better access to the bloc's preferential market. The gain of access is always larger, so an outsider would always want to apply for membership in the existing bloc. If the bloc policy is open membership, its expansion would result in global free trade.

But if member countries can accept or reject new members, expansion of the bloc is unlikely to yield global free trade. When deciding whether to accept or reject a new member, an insider compares the gains from getting preferential access to the new member's market with the losses from having to share its original preferential market with the new member. When the bloc is small, the gains are large enough to offset the losses, so insiders are willing to accept new members. As the bloc expands, the insiders' incentive for expanding decreases, eventually to zero. If only one regional integration arrangement were allowed to form, insiders would stop accepting new members when half the world belonged to the bloc.

The remaining outsiders would probably form a bloc of their own, which would lead members of the original bloc to increase its size in anticipation of the creation of the second bloc. The threat of regionalism by outsiders would foster larger regional integration arrangements.

In this model, the typical subgame perfect equilibrium would be two blocs, one of them containing roughly two-thirds of the world, the other containing roughly one-third.

Even if blocs form and merge simultaneously, yielding progressively larger symmetrical blocs, they would fail to converge in a single bloc unless the external tariff were low enough. In other words, global free trade could be achieved through bloc expansion if trading blocs lowered their external tariffs when abolishing their internal tariffs.

JEL Classification: F10, F12, F15

Suggested Citation

Andriamananjara, Soamiely, On the Size and Number of Regional Integration Arrangements: A Political Economy Model (May 1999). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=170108 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.170108

Soamiely Andriamananjara (Contact Author)

World Bank - World Bank Institute (WBI) ( email )

1818 H Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20433
United States
202 458 0284 (Phone)

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