6533b871fe1ef96bd12d1931

RESEARCH PRODUCT

On Subsidies in Trade Agreements

Philip SauréPhilip Sauré

subject

International free trade agreementbusiness.industryMarket accessSubsidyBusinessInternational tradeInternational economicsTerms of tradeTrade barrierFree tradeExternalityTrade agreement

description

When terms of trade externalities are the only source of cross-border inefficiencies, trade negotiators must negotiate market access only. Based on this principle, Bagwell and Staiger (2006) argue against the WTO subsidy rules. The present paper shows that their argument fails when trade agreements are required to be self-enforceable. By affecting output, subsidies impact the self-enforcement constraints, which, in turn, determine the policies of trade agreements. Consequently, trade agreements must include subsidy rules. In realistic scenarios, banning production subsidies is efficient while negotiating market access only is inefficient. In this sense, this paper makes a strong case for the WTO subsidy rules.

https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1156411