Global Supply Chains and Trade Policy

Working Paper: NBER ID: w21883

Authors: Emily J. Blanchard; Chad P. Bown; Robert C. Johnson

Abstract: How do global supply chain linkages modify countries' incentives to impose import protection? Are these linkages empirically important determinants of trade policy? To address these questions, we introduce supply chain linkages into a workhorse terms-of-trade model of trade policy with political economy. Theory predicts that discretionary final goods tariffs will be decreasing in the domestic content of foreign-produced final goods. Provided foreign political interests are not too strong, final goods tariffs will also be decreasing in the foreign content of domestically-produced final goods. We test these predictions using newly assembled data on bilateral applied tariffs, temporary trade barriers, and value-added contents for 14 major economies over the 1995-2009 period. We find strong support for the empirical predictions of the model. Our results imply that global supply chains matter for trade policy, both in principle and in practice.

Keywords: Global Supply Chains; Trade Policy; Tariffs; Value Added

JEL Codes: F1; F13; F14


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
higher domestic value added in foreign final goods (F29)lower applied bilateral tariffs (F13)
higher foreign value added in domestic final goods (F23)lower applied bilateral tariffs (F13)

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