Marketing the Gains from Trade
By Josh Bivens
June 19, 2007
June 19, 2007 | EPI Issue Brief #233
Read news release.
Marketing the gains from trade
A 1980s ad campaign for Isuzu cars (remember Joe Isuzu?)
famously conveyed the message that good products should not need
wild exaggerations told on their behalf to convince the public of
their virtue.
This bit of wisdom is oddly useful to keep in mind during the
recent stepped-up debates over proposed new trade agreements.
Advocates of signing as many of these agreements as quickly as
possible (regardless, apparently, of their actual content) have
made arguments about globalization’s benefits whose audacity would
make Joe proud. A sample:
“...elimination of remaining global barriers [to trade flows] would
add another $500 billion to annual income or $4,500 per U.S.
household.”(Testimony of the U.S. Trade Representative to the
Senate Finance Committee, February 15, 2007)
“But this complacency is wrong. The Peterson Institute for
International Economics calculates that the removal of remaining
trade barriers would boost U.S. income by $500 billion a year.”
(Sebastian Mallaby)
“And the answer there was that a means to truly global free trade
would enhance the U.S. standard of living by another half trillion
dollars a year, another 500 billion [dollars] per year.” (Fred
Bergsten)
Five hundred billion dollars is a lot of money—roughly 4% of the
entire economy of the United States. Is it a generally accepted
proposition by economists that trade liberalization should be
expected to add this much to the U.S. economy?
The answer is pretty simple: nope. Just like the Isuzu Trooper was
big, yet did not have as many seats as the Astrodome, trade
liberalization’s benefits, while real, are not near as large as
more zealous advocates claim.
What do most studies say about the benefits
of trade liberalization?
The United States International
Trade Commission (USITC) periodically releases a comprehensive
report, The Economic Effects of Significant U.S. Import Restraints,
which essentially assesses how much removing all remaining barriers
to imports into the United States would add to gross domestic
product (GDP). The latest edition puts this number at $3.7 billion,
or less than 1% of what the above advocates claim.
Two other well-known models used to calculate the gains resulting
from complete trade liberalization spit out roughly similar
results. The Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) estimates U.S.
gains of close to $8 billion (less than 2% of the claims above).
The World Bank’s LINKAGE model has estimated that the United States
would gain about $16.2 billion (less than 4% of the claims
above).
What does economic theory tell us about
gains to expect from liberalization?
There is a quick and
easy way, following mainstream trade theory, to estimate
prospective gains from further trade liberalization. What follows
is a quick calculation using the theory of (static) comparative
advantage. This theory is sometimes caricatured as staid and
somehow obsolete in capturing the full range of ways in which trade
can add benefits to the U.S. economy.
Arguments over hipness aside, this theory remains the intellectual
foundation of the economic case for trade liberalization. Arguing
that liberalization’s benefits far exceed what this theory predicts
requires that one get awfully creative, and creativity in trade
theory works both for and against the simple policy recommendation
that liberalization is best policy always and everywhere. In short,
the calculation below is the most reliable method of predicting the
benefits of liberalization—everything over and above this is
interesting and should be explored but cannot be considered
conclusive.
The United States today has an average tariff rate of less than 2%.
This low average rate may
mask some higher peak tariffs on particular goods and non-tariff
barriers that keep imports out the country. Say (generously to the
case for trade liberalization) that the effective tariff rate into the U.S. economy is
five times as large as the simple average—the equivalent of a 10%
tariff on all imports (most estimates of the effective rate of
protection are actually only around twice as high as
theaverage rate). One can then
calculate what removing all of these trade barriers would imply for
U.S. income.
With a 10% tariff, some goods are produced domestically even though
they could be produced for 10% less abroad. Some goods, however,
are produced domestically but would only be 1% cheaper if purchased
abroad. Using the midpoint, it can be assumed that removing a 10%
tariff lowers the average price of imports by 5%.
Next, one estimates how much imports will increase following the
tariff cut. The relevant academic literature argues that three is a
pretty generous estimate of the elasticity of imports with respect to tariff cuts
(this is essentially a measure of how robustly imports respond to
cuts in tariffs), so imports will rise from the current 18.0% of
GDP to 23.4%—that is, they rise by 30%, the product of the fall in
import prices due to the tariff cut (10%) times the elasticity of
import demand (3).
Now each parameter needed to calculate the gains from
liberalization is in place. From here, just multiply
the decrease in import prices by the
increase in imports resulting from the tariff cut to
yield the estimate of the gains from trade liberalization: 5.0%
times 5.4% equals 0.26% of GDP, or, roughly $30 billion. This is
the rough estimate that can be banked. The other $470 billion needs
a lot of explaining.
Where does the $500 billion number come
from?
A 2005 study by Bradford, Grieco, and Hufbauer
(BGH, henceforth), published by the Peterson Institute for
International Economics, is the source of the claim that future
trade agreements can yield $500 billion in extra income for the
United States. BGH undertake no original number-crunching in
arriving at these numbers (which is no sin—review and
interpretation definitely count as research); instead they invoke
two independent studies on trade gains to justify the $500 billion
estimate of prospective increases from liberalization.
The first one was a 2001 study by Brown, Deardorff, and Stern (BDS,
henceforth) using the Michigan Model of World Production and Trade.
The second is a 2004 study by Bradford and Lawrence (BL,
henceforth). Results from both studies regarding the gains from
trade are premised overwhelmingly on the assumption that barriers
to trade exist even when no explicit
price or quantity restrictions on imports or foreign investment can
be identified.
For example, BDS estimate that about 85% of projected U.S. gains
from future trade liberalizations will come from liberalization of
the service sector. This will surprise many, since it is not common
to think of the U.S. service sector as benefiting greatly from
trade protection. However, BDS use a very expansive definition of
protection to get their results.
Essentially, they look at gross operating
margins across industries and countries. As a baseline,
they take the lowest gross operating margin that exists in any
country for each particular industry, and from there they assume
that the difference between this and operating margins in the same
industry located in other countries is solely the result of a policy barrier to trade that can be
removed.
This method yields the hard-to-believe result that the service
sector in the United States is notably inefficient and protected
relative to the rest of the world, ranking ninth out of 14
countries (see Table 1, first
column). Even Japan, whose service sector is widely considered
closed to foreign competition, ranks as more open than the United
States, using gross operating margins as the relevant measure.

Dorman (2001) notes that BDS cite Hoekman (2000) as the source
for this methodological approach. However, Hoekman (2000) actually
cites this approach as just one of many. Another method used by
Hoekman (2000) is to identify actual
trade barriers and weight them according to interviews with
selected businesses who work in the protected areas.
Using this approach, the United States is by far
the least protected service
market identified, not more restrictive than the average, which the
BDS results suggest (see Table 1, second column). This second
approach implies very little gain to the United States from further
liberalizing its service sector, as access to it is already as free
as the global economy allows anywhere.
Further, as noted in this context by Baker and Weisbrot (2002), it
is a general fact that even different firms within the same
industry in a given country often have very different gross
operating margins: Safeway’s margin (29%) is over 50% higher than
its industry average (18%). Target’s margin is 50% greater than
Wal-Mart’s, yet very few people think there are explicit policy
barriers to Target competing with Wal-Mart within the United
States.
BDS acknowledge that their method does not provide an airtight
estimate of the trade barriers faced by service-sector firms,
allowing that “these estimates of services barriers are intended to
be indirect approximations of what the actual barriers may in fact
be” (BDS 2001, 18).
When the World Bank (2002) adopted a similar approach to
forecasting gains from service trade, and, it noted “the
quantification of services sectors’ trade barriers and other forms
of protection is still more art than science" (World Bank 2002,
170).
Art has its place. But it is not in policy debates that should be
largely based in numbers that we know about, not those that we
imagine we see in the gaps.
The BL study takes price differences between commodities classified
similarly (T-shirts, say) as evidence of barriers to trade that
should erode these differences, again, without actually pointing to
identifiable trade barriers.
Furthermore, while the BL study does not examine the service
sector, BGH “scale up” the BL results on merchandise trade by
looking at the ratio of service sector to merchandise
liberalization benefits identified by BDS. What looks to be a
robust result (two studies converging on a common number for what
future trade agreements can bring the U.S. economy) turns out to
hinge mostly on how convincing only one of the studies is.
Growth versus distribution
Lastly, it should be noted that the same theory that argues
unambiguously that trade is “win-win” in terms of
total national income argues
just as strongly that trade is “win-lose” for productive factors
located within countries (the
Stolper-Samuelson Theorem). Numerous studies have confirmed the
predicted result of this theorem (if disagreed on
the magnitude of the effect)
that falling trade costs (liberalization) are associated with
widening inequality and absolute wage losses for blue-collar and
non-managerial labor in the United States (i.e., about
three-fourths of the private-sector workforce).
This completely standard result is distorted by BGH, whose
characterization of that group losing from expanded trade
(concentrated) and the scale of losses (small, relative to net
benefits) is literally the
opposite of what is predicted by mainstream trade
theory.
BGH justify characterizing trade’s losers as “small” and
“concentrated” by examining only those
workers directly displaced by trade. This group generally
never shows up in most trade theories, which assume full-employment
always and everywhere. Displacement, in short, while a real-world
problem, is decidedly not the biggest cause of income losses due to
trade and trade liberalization.
Rather, the largest cost from trade is the permanent and steady drag on the wages of all
American workers whose education and skills resemble those
displaced by trade. Waitresses, for example, do not generally lose
their jobs due to trade, but their pay suffers as workers displaced
from tradeable goods industries crowd into their labor market and
bid down wages.1 Not acknowledging these wage costs is a very good
way to minimize the total debit column in the balance sheet of
globalization’s impact on American workers.
Lastly, and, most important, mainstream trade theory predicts that
the larger the gains from trade, the larger the re-distribution of
income and the larger the gross losses inflicted. Even worse, this
theory predicts that more income will be re-distributed than
created because of trade (one aspect of the so-called
“magnification effect”). Given this, it is hugely inaccurate to
refer to the losses spurred by trade as either small or
concentrated.
Conclusion
Economic theory and evidence provide plenty of ammunition to
support cutting trade barriers. One can stipulate that economic
theory predicts that removal of trade barriers leads to higher
national incomes. Erecting trade barriers as a policy response to
the problems introduced to American workers through globalization
is far from an optimal solution, and stipulating this moves the
debate along to more contested areas—such as the fact that economic
theory and evidence also provide plenty of evidence to raise as
many concerns about the distribution of income as its overall
growth.
Occasionally, however, zealous advocates go far past what sound
evidence argues in making the case for trade. The $500 billion
figure reputed to be the future gains from trade liberalization is
clearly meant to stifle, not inform, debate. It should be retired
from future trade policy discussions.
Endnotes
1. This is not necessarily the exact channel through which
globalization pushes down wages even in non-traded sectors, but it
is close enough to serve as a short-hand description.
References
Anderson, Kym, Will
Martin, and Dominique van der Mensbrugghe. 2006. Distortions to
world trade: Impacts on agricultural markets and farm incomes from
full trade liberalization. Review of
Agricultural Economics. Vol. 28, No. 2, pp. 168–94.
Baker, Dean, and Mark Weisbrot. 2002. The Relative Impact of Trade Liberalization on Developng
Countries. Center for Economic Policy Research Briefing
Paper. Washington, D.C.: CEPR.
Bergsten, Fred. 2006. America and the
World Economy: A Strategy for the Next Decade. Transcript
found at:
http://www.cfr.org/publication/7786/america_and_the_world_economy.html?breadcrumb=/bios/257/peter_g_peterson
Bradford, Scott, Paul Grieco, and Gary Hufbauer. 2005. “The Payoff to American from Global Integration.” In Bergsten (ed.), The United States and the World Economy: Foreign Economic Policy for the Next Decade. Washington, D.C.: Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Bradford, Scott C., and Robert Z. Lawrence. 2004. Has Globalization Gone Far Enough? The Costs of Fragmented Markets. Washington: Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Brown, Drusilla K., Alan V. Deardorff, and Robert M. Stern. 2001. CGE Modeling and Analysis of Multilateral and Regional Negotiating Options. Research seminar in International Economics Discussion Paper 468. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan School of Public Policy. January.
Dimaranan, Betina, Thomas Hertel and Will Martin. 2002. “Potential Gains from Post-Uruguay Round Trade Reform: Impacts on Developing Countries.” In A. McCalla and J. Nash (eds.), Reforming Agricultural Trade for Developing Countries: Quantifying the Impacts of Multilateral Trade Reform. Chapter 6.
Dorman, Peter. 2001. The Free Trade Magic Act. Economic Policy Institute Briefing Paper. Washington, D.C.: EPI.
Hoekman, Bernard. 2000. The next round of services negotiations: Identifying priorities and options. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review. Vol. 82, pp. 31-47.
Mallaby, Sebastian. 2007. Free trade: Pause or
fast-forward. The Washington Post.
March 2, A15.
World Bank. 2002. Global Economic
Prospects and the Developing Countries 2002. Washington,
D.C.: World Bank.
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