Search results for "jel:F13"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

The Impact of Trade Liberalisation on Water Use: A Computable General Equilibrium Analysis

2008

Water is scarce in many countries. One instrument to improve the allocation of a scarce resource is (efficient) pricing or taxation. However, water is implicitly traded on international markets, particularly through food and textiles, so that impacts of water taxes cannot be studied in isolation, but require an analysis of international trade implications. We include water as a production factor in a multi-region, multi-sector computable general equilibrium model (GTAP), to assess a series of water tax policies. We find that water taxes reduce water use, and lead to shifts in production, consumption, and international trade patterns. Countries that do not levy water taxes are nonetheless af…

Consumption (economics)Computable general equilibriumComputable General Equilibrium Trade Liberalization Water Policy Water ScarcityFactors of productionInternational economicsjel:F13jel:D58Water scarcityCOMPUTABLE GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM TRADE LIBERALIZATION WELFARE EFFECTSSettore SECS-P/03 - Scienza Delle FinanzeFarm waterEconomicsProduction (economics)jel:Q25General Economics Econometrics and FinanceFree tradejel:Q17Water use
researchProduct

FOREIGN MONOPOLIES AND TARIFF AGREEMENTS UNDER INTEGRATED MARKETS

2005

In this paper the optimal policy and the stability of a tariff agreement among the importers of a monopolized good that is sold in an integrated market are studied. To analyze the stability, the tariff agreement formation is modelled as a two-stage game. In the first stage each importer decides whether or not to sign the agreement and in the second stage the signatories and non-signatories choose their tariff whereas the monopoly chooses the quantity or the price. The findings show that the optimal policy of the importers depends on which strategic variable is selected by the monopolist but that, on the contrary, this decision has no effects on the level of cooperation that can be reached b…

MicroeconomicsVariable (computer science)foreign monopolies self-enforcing tariff agreements integrated markets rent-shifting hypothesis prices versus quantitiesEconomicsTariffjel:D42Monopolyjel:F13
researchProduct

Political risk and export promotion: evidence from Germany

2008

Political risk represents an important hidden transaction cost that reduces international trade. This paper investigates the claim that German public export credit guarantees (Hermes guarantees) mitigate this friction to trade flows and hence promote exports. We employ an empirical trade gravity model, where we explicitly control for political risk in the importing country in order to evaluate the effect of export guarantees. The idea behind export promotion through public export credit agencies (ECAs) is that the private market is unable to provide adequate insurance for all risks associated with exports. As a consequence, firms' export activities are limited in the absence of insurance pr…

Transaction costEconomics and EconometricsExport credit agencyPolitical riskmedia_common.quotation_subjectjel:H81Control (management)jel:C23International economicsjel:F13Promotion (rank)public export credit guaranteespolitical riskpanel regressionOrder (exchange)Gravity model of tradeAccountingPolitical Science and International RelationsEconomicsFinancePanel datamedia_common
researchProduct