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Preference Erosion and Multilateral Trade Liberalization

Joseph Francois (), Bernard Hoekman () and Miriam Manchin ()

The Institute for International Integration Studies Discussion Paper Series from IIIS

Abstract: Because of concern that OECD tariff reductions will translate into worsening export performance for the least developed countries, trade preferences have proven a stumbling block to developing country support for multilateral liberalization. We examine the actual scope for preference erosion, including an econometric assessment of the actual utilization, and also the scope for erosion estimated by modeling full elimination of OECD tariffs and hence full MFN liberalization-based preference erosion. Preferences are underutilized due to administrative burden—estimated to be at least 4 percent on average—reducing the magnitude of erosion costs significantly. For those products where preferences are used (are of value), the primary negative impact follows from erosion of EU preferences. This suggests the erosion problem is primarily bilateral rather than a WTO-based concern.

Keywords: preference erosion; GSP; WTO; Doha Round; trade and development (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F13 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-int
Date: Written 2005-12-15
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Related works:
Working Paper: Preference erosion and multilateral trade liberalization (2005) Downloads
Working Paper: Preference Erosion and Multilateral Trade Liberalization (2005) Downloads
Working Paper: Preference Erosion and Multilateral Trade Liberalization (2005) Downloads
Journal Article: Preference Erosion and Multilateral Trade Liberalization (2006)
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