What Does the Political Economy Literature on Trade Policy Not Tell Us That We Ought to Know?

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP1039

Authors: Dani Rodrik

Abstract: Three questions lie at the core of the large and distinguished literature on the political economy of trade policy. First, why is international trade not free? Second, why are trade policies universally biased against (rather than in favour of) trade? Third, what are the determinants of the variation in protection levels across industries, countries, and institutional contexts? These questions are handled only imperfectly by the existing literature. Current models treat trade policy as a redistributive tool, but do not explain why it emerges in political equilibrium in preference over more direct policy instruments. Further, existing models do not generate a bias against trade, implying that pro-trade interventions are as likely as trade-restricting interventions. The greatest contribution of the political economy literature may lie in developing a better grasp of normative economic analysis - that is, in helping design policies, rules, and institutions.

Keywords: political economy; trade policy

JEL Codes: F13


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
organized interests (L39)trade restrictions (F14)
historical factors (B15)bias against trade policies (F13)
trade taxes (H29)protectionist measures (F13)
political and economic factors (P16)trade policy outcomes (F13)

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