Tariff Policy and the Foreign Entry Decision in the Presence of a Cost‐Based Informational Asymmetry
Mark G. Herander and
Brad Kamp
Review of International Economics, 2003, vol. 11, issue 5, 845-859
Abstract:
The paper demonstrates that the standard prediction on the relation between tariff rates and the mode of foreign entry—exports or direct investment—may not hold in the presence of incomplete information. A foreign firm lacks full information on the cost structure of an informed incumbent firm located in the domestic (potential) host country. Within a two‐period model, the local incumbent may behave in a manner which keeps the potential foreign entrant uninformed of its cost structure. In such a pooling equilibrium, the uninformed foreign firm either refrains from entering altogether or serves the host country via exports at tariff rates which would, otherwise under complete information, induce entry via direct investment. When entry mode is altered, other standard full‐information effects of trade policy may also no longer hold.
Date: 2003
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