Trade Reform with a Government Budget Constraint
36 Pages Posted: 11 Jun 2000 Last revised: 5 Jun 2022
Date Written: November 1996
Abstract
The standard theory of trade reform uses a passive government budget constraint, in which changes in tariff revenue are offset by changes in lump sum transfers. This paper offers a general framework for the analysis of trade reform when the government budget constraint is active, meaning that tariff revenue cuts must be offset by distortionary fiscal policy changes --- public good supply cuts or alternative tax increases. Useful and simple new expressions characterizing welfare improving trade reform compare the Marginal Cost of Funds (MCF) of trade taxes with the MCF of consumption taxes. The MCF expressions provide an intuitive index number which is operational with Computable General Equilibrium models. The theoretical analysis and an application to Korean data in 1963 both cast doubt on the desirability of tariff cuts in convex competitive economies with active government budget constraints.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Coordinating Tariff Reduction and Domestic Tax Reform
By Michael Keen and Jenny E. Ligthart
-
On Selective Indirect Tax Reform in Developing Countries
By M. Shahe Emran and Joseph E. Stiglitz
-
Tax Revenue and (or?) Trade Liberalization
By Thomas Baunsgaard and Michael Keen
-
Coordinating Tariff Reduction and Domestic Tax Reform Under Imperfect Competition
By Michael Keen and Jenny E. Ligthart
-
Vat Base Broadening, Self Supply, and the Informal Sector
By John Piggott and John Whalley
-
By Vito Tanzi
-
Revenue Neutral Trade Reform with Many Households, Quotas and Tariffs
-
The Value-Added Tax: Its Causes and Consequences
By Michael Keen and Ben Lockwood