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Impact of China's WTO Accession on East Asia

Elena Ianchovichina and Terrie Walmsley

No 331094, Conference papers from Purdue University, Center for Global Trade Analysis, Global Trade Analysis Project

Abstract: China’s WTO accession will have major implications for China and present both opportunities and challenges for East Asia. We assess the possible channels through which China’s accession to the WTO could affect East Asia and quantify these effects using a dynamic computable general equilibrium model. China will be the biggest beneficiary of accession, followed by the industrialized and newly industrializing economies (NIEs) in East Asia. However, their benefits are small relative to the size of their economies and to the vigorous growth projected to occur in the region over the next 10 years. By contrast, developing countries in East Asia are expected to incur small declines in real GDP and welfare as a result of China’s accession, mainly because with the elimination of quotas on Chinese textile and apparel exports to developed countries China will because a formidable competitor in areas in which these countries have comparative advantage. With WTO accession China will increase its demand for petrochemicals, electronics, machinery, and equipment from Japan and the Newly Industrializing Economies (NIEs), and farm, timber, energy products, and other manufactures from the developing East Asian countries. New foreign investment is likely to flow into these expanding sectors. The overall impact on foreign investment is likely to be positive in the NIEs, but negative for the less developed East Asian countries as a result of the contraction of these economies’ textile and apparel sector. As China becomes a more efficient supplier of services or a more efficient producer of high-end manufactures, its comparative advantage will shift into higher-end products. This is good news for the poor developing economies in East Asia, but implies that the impact of China’s WTO accession on the NIEs may change to include heightened competition in global markets.

Keywords: International Relations/Trade; International Development (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 28
Date: 2003
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Related works:
Working Paper: Impact of China’s WTO Accession on East Asia (2010) Downloads
Journal Article: Impact of China's WTO Accession on East Asia (2005) Downloads
Working Paper: The impact of China's WTO accession on East Asia (2003) Downloads
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