Protectionist Responses to the Crisis: Damage Observed in Product-Level Trade

42 Pages Posted: 22 Jun 2011

See all articles by Christian Henn

Christian Henn

International Monetary Fund

Brad McDonald

International Monetary Fund

Date Written: June 2011

Abstract

This paper investigates how trade flows are being affected by new discriminatory measures implemented during the global financial crisis. We match data on behind-the-border measures (e.g., bailouts and subsidies) and border measures implemented through April 2010 to monthly HS 4-digit bilateral trade data. Our estimation strategy relies on a first-differenced gravity equation and time-varying fixed effects to disentangle the impact of new discriminatory measures. Trade in exporter-importer pairs subject to new measures decreased by 5 to 8 percent relative to trade in the same product among pairs not subject to new measures. These product-level results imply global trade declines at the aggregate level of about 0.2 percent, or $30-35 billion a year. These aggregate figures would be higher, if one third of measures had not been excluded due to incomplete data. The paper then goes on to dissect protectionism’s trade impact by disaggregating measures by type, advanced/developing countries, regions, sectors, and time. Behind-the-border measures are found to have been more harmful than border measures at the product level. Among border measures, impacts tend to be higher for less transparent measures. Advanced countries are found to be responsible for 2/3 of the trade decline due to crisis protectionism, but their exports also absorbed 2/3 of this decline. When breaking down measures in a time dimension, we find that those taken in the first nine months after the Lehman collapse were most harmful and likely continue to constitute a drag on trade.

Suggested Citation

Henn, Christian and McDonald, Brad, Protectionist Responses to the Crisis: Damage Observed in Product-Level Trade (June 2011). IMF Working Paper No. 11/139, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1869548

Christian Henn (Contact Author)

International Monetary Fund ( email )

700 19th St NW
Washington, DC 20431
United States

Brad McDonald

International Monetary Fund ( email )

700 19th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20431
United States

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
91
Abstract Views
648
Rank
541,791
PlumX Metrics