| Title: | The Perversity of Preferences: GSP and Developing Country Trade Policies, 1976-2000 |
| Number: | 02-04 |
| Author: | Çaglar Özden and Eric Reinhardt |
| Issue Date: | April 2002 |
| Abstract: | Developed countries maintain special tariff preferences, namely the
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP), for imports from developing countries.
Critics have highlighted the underachieving nature of such preferences,
but developing countries continue to place GSP at the heart of their agenda
in multilateral negotiations. What effect do such preferences have
on a recipient's own trade policies? We develop and test a simple theoretical
model of a small country's trade policy choice, using a dataset of 154
developing countries from 1976 through 2000. We find that countries
removed from GSP adopt more liberal trade policies than those remaining
eligible. The results, corrected for endogeneity and robust to numerous
alternative measures of trade policy, suggest that developing countries
may be best served by full integration into the reciprocity-based world
trade regime rather than continued GSP-style special preferences.
|
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