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Industrial policy and global public goods provision: rethinking the environmental trade agreement

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Andres, Pia

Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment

LSE - London

2023

45 p.

climate change ; decarbonization ; social dumping ; trade agreement ; protectionism

international

Working paper

388

Trade

https://www.lse.ac.uk/granthaminstitute/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/working-paper-388-Andres-0.pdf

English

Bibliogr.

"Many countries have used protectionist measures, such as local content requirements or anti-dumping tariffs, to develop or protect their domestic industries producing low-carbon technologies such as solar panels. This paper asks if there could be global long-term benefits to an industrial policy that allows a potential supplier country to realise its potential and catch up with countries already producing clean technologies competitively. The paper presents a simple model showing when this may be the case.

Two countries – one with an advanced (or ‘frontier') and one with a not-yet-competitive (or ‘laggard') clean technology-producing firm – play a two-stage game and decide whether or not to trade. Reaching the technological frontier requires learning-by-doing. If subsidies are not used and the difference in initial production costs is large, then operating in a state of self-reliance, or autarky, in Stage 1 can improve social welfare globally by increasing market competition in Stage 2. However, greater competitive benefits can be achieved by using producer subsidies, which avoid the cost of protection.

The paper also highlights how the more advanced country can use its market power to extract rents from a laggard country and may therefore prefer that the laggard country cannot compete, even though this reduces consumer surplus and positive externalities/public goods provision. The higher the global positive externalities (such as avoided damaging impacts from climate change) from using the technology, the more closely countries' preferences should align with one another's.

Overall, the analysis suggests that an environmental trade agreement would be most beneficial globally if measures supporting producers upstream were permitted."

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