Tariff Policy for a Monopolist in a Signaling Game

35 Pages Posted: 18 Feb 1998

See all articles by Dorbin R. Kolev

Dorbin R. Kolev

Mitchell Madison Group

Thomas Prusa

Rutgers University

Date Written: December 15, 1997

Abstract

We examine the incentives for a government to levy an optimal tariff on a foreign monopolist with unknown costs. With complete information, the home government uses tariffs to extract rents and implements a discriminatory policy that imposes higher tariffs on the more efficient monopolist. If the government is incompletely informed about costs, we show that under reasonable conditions the unique self-enforcing outcome involves pooling where the firm exports the same quantity regardless of its efficiency. Due to the distortions created by incomplete information we find that in general home country welfare is higher under alternative policies such as uniform tariffs or free trade than under one of discriminatory tariffs. Our results suggest that trade policies that are motivated by rent extraction are unlikely to be robust to the introduction of incomplete information.

JEL Classification: F13; D82; L12

Suggested Citation

Kolev, Dorbin R. and Prusa, Thomas, Tariff Policy for a Monopolist in a Signaling Game (December 15, 1997). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=53801 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.53801

Dorbin R. Kolev

Mitchell Madison Group ( email )

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Thomas Prusa (Contact Author)

Rutgers University ( email )

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