Trade agreements galore. Who, what, when, where, why, how and how much?
PhD ceremony: Mr. T. Kohl, 12.45 uur, Academiegebouw, Broerstraat 5, Groningen
Dissertation: Trade agreements galore. Who, what, when, where, why, how and how much?
Promotor(s): prof. S. Brakman, prof. J.H. Garretsen
Faculty: Economics and Business
The World Trade Organization (WTO) is designed to promote trade among its members on the basis of non-discriminatory liberalization. However, nations often pursue free trade agreements (FTAs) that extend preferential treatment to a select group of members. The lack of progress in the WTO’s Doha negotiations and the rapid increase of FTAs raises the question whether the WTO is still the most suitable institution to promote free trade.
This thesis explores the impact of international institutions on world trade for the period 1948-2007. Using the gravity equation and a new, extensive dataset, we find that WTO membership increases trade. However, the gains depend on members’ ability to make extensive commitments. On the whole, FTAs are also good for trade, but the agreements vary in effectiveness: 40 percent have no discernable effect, 30 percent cause a decline in trade and only 30 percent actually boost trade.
A major contribution of this is that we develop an index that accounts for the legal provisions contained in 296 unique FTAs. Surprisingly, most FTAs are firmly grounded in WTO policy and often pursue even more extensive collaboration than agreed at the level of WTO. Moreover, we show that comprehensive agreements containing legally binding provisions have greater trade-promoting effects than agreements with few and/or non-enforceable commitments to liberalize trade.
Taken together, we find that the WTO and FTAs are complementary institutional arrangements that boost world trade, provided that the commitments to pursue economic integration are comprehensive and legally enforceable.
Last modified: | 13 March 2020 12.59 a.m. |
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