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Empirical Analysis of the National Treatment Obligation Under the WTO: The Case of Japanese Shochu

Naoshi Doi and Hiroshi Ohashi

No CIRJE-F-834, CIRJE F-Series from CIRJE, Faculty of Economics, University of Tokyo

Abstract: The national treatment obligation, along with the most favored nation obligation, is an important principle of non-discrimination adopted by theWorld Trade Organization. It requires that foreign products be treated no less favorably than national products. This paper empirically examines the 1996 WTO recommendation that a Japanese distilled alcoholic beverage, shochu , be classed as a "directly competitive or substitutable product" with regard to other distilled drinks, and thus that not taxing similarly be in violation of its national treatment obligation. Demand estimates obtained from a random-coefficient discrete-choice model reveal that a substitution pattern of shochu is far more complicated than that presumed by the WTO. Upon the WTO recommendation, Japan made all distilled alcoholic beverages be taxable at the same level in 2000. Our simulation analysis indicates that the revised tax rates improved but did not maximize Japanese national welfare.

Pages: 26 pages
Date: 2012-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dcm
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Journal Article: Empirical analysis of the national treatment obligation under the WTO: The case of Japanese shochu (2017) Downloads
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