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Credibility, Real Interest Rates, and the Optimal Speed of Trade Liberalization

Kenneth Froot

No 2358, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc

Abstract: This paper investigates the effects of imperfectly credible trade liberalization programs on welfare and the allocation of real resources. We present a rational expectations model in which a government, with limited access to international financial markets may be forced to abort a liberalization program if hard-currency reserves are depleted too quickly. The liberalization's lack of perfect credibility arts as a distortion which becomes (rationally) intensified under the typical first-best policy of a direct move to free trade. A gradual lowering of trade barriers turns out to he welfare-superior to an immediate liberalization, and to improve the chance that. the program will ultimately succeed. We then derive the optimal speed of liberalization, the intertemporal allocation of resources, and the liberalization program's credibility.

Date: 1987-08
Note: ITI ME IFM
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Published as Journal of International Economics, Vol. 25, pp. 71-93, (1988).

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