tariff rate quotas (trqs) lecture 11: aheed course international agricultural trade and policy...
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TARIFF RATE QUOTA’s (TRQs)
Lecture 11: AHEED Course “International Agricultural Trade and Policy” Taught by , Alex F. McCalla, Professor Emeritus, UC Davis. April 5, 2010 University of Tirana, Albania Lecture courtesy of Professor Colin A. Carter, UC Davis
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs)
• A tariff quota is a two-tiered tariff. In a given period, the lower in-quota tariff (t) is applied to the first Q units of imports and higher over quota tariff (T) is applied to all subsequent imports.
• Important for CA agric as TRQs are commonly used to restrict imports of fruits & vegetables. Worldwide, there are more than 350 TRQs placed on trade in fruits & vegs & more than 25% of all agric TRQs are concentrated in fruit & vegs trade.
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs)-2
• TRQs account for 20% of total agric. tariff lines in WTO developed countries.
• Legally, TRQs are not quantitative restrictions because they do not
limit the imported quantity. • However, if the over-quota tariff
is prohibitive under normal market conditions it will yield
exactly the same import volume as a traditional quota. 4
Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs)- 3• URAA required tariffication of NTBs &
required min. access to pry open markets, such as Japanese rice & Canadian poultry.
• WTO Members were required to maintain imports at 1986-88 “base” levels, & where access was < 5% of domestic consumption, additional min. access had to be opened on a most-favored-nation (MFN) basis; to reach 5% of consumption by 2000.
• Japan dragged it heels on rice
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•Tariff Binding: all countries declare the highest tariff for each commodity = Bound Rate
•3-5% to be imported to promote trade
•“In quota volume” based on 1985 consumption
•“In quota” volume to have a lower tariff
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs)- 4
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Average Ag. tariff Tariff lines
Country All TariffsIn-
quotaOver-quota
Without TRQs
In-quota tariffs
Over-quota tariffs
TRQ lines as % of total lines
% Number %
Average for table 59 59 115 33,392 4,876 6,827 20
Australia 4 19 26 784 11 10 1 Brazil 37 7 28 1,417 4 6 0 Canada 7 3 74 939 115 250 27 China 14 6 43 938 46 46 5 EU 22 17 79 1,516 315 277 18 Japan 19 22 420 1,154 188 123 11 Korea, 27 19 309 1,127 195 180 16 Mexico 35 48 148 882 69 68 8 New Zealand 7 0 7 971 4 4 0 Norway 101 213 204 706 363 497 70 Taiwan 11 20 179 1,257 111 91 7 US 5 10 35 1,270 193 376 30 http://www.ers.usda.gov/db/wto/
Raises a domestic policy question:How much protection actually needed
to keep out imports & preserve domestic rents?
Put differently – how much can the over-TRQ tariffs be lowered, with no effect on domestic industry prices &
profits?
How much “unused” protection exists with current TRQs? (i.e., “water in the
tariff”) 10
Difference Btwn Bound & Applied Tariff Rates
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•e.g., in negotiations & lobby efforts, Canadian dairy industry repeatedly argues against lowering over-TRQ tariffs, even at the cost of giving up an increase in TRQ levels, increasing imports (Barichello)
•Political economy debate about TRQs liberalization focuses on increase in the quota (Q), reduction in the in-quota (t) or out-of-quota (T) tariffs
Difference Btwn Bound & Applied Tariff Rates - 2
Difference Btwn Bound & Applied Tariff Rates - 3
There are numerous cases where countries have TRQs in place with very large over-TRQ tariffs imposed.
Prominent examples of mega-tariffs (over 100%):– Canadian Poultry products
– US sugar– EU sugar
– Japanese rice– Korean rice
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs)- #s
As of May 2005, there were 1,434 different agricultural TRQs notified to
the WTO: 45 countries employing TRQs.
TRQs generate quota rents, legitimize a role for state trading, & allow
importers to discriminate among exporters.
Based on theory, it is questionable whether the implementation of TRQs
improves market access & global welfare.
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs) - How Administered
Only 1% of all TRQs notified to the WTO in 2000 used auctions (about 4% in ’04).
Quota fill rates are significantly higher for historical allocation & state trading.
In practice, trading quota rights tends to be prohibited by quota administrators.
The displacement of inframarginal traders by extramarginal traders is a source of inefficiency in TRQ administration.
The availability of quota rents provides an incentive for extramarginal traders to enter the market.
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs) Reforms?
Skully (2001) argues that if TRQs cannot be abolished or converted to tariffs, then 2nd best option is to make all TRQs global & auction them.
Quota expansion & in-quota and over-quota tariff reductions would achieve maximum liberalization results (OECD 2002).
IATRC (2001) advocated that further WTO negotiations should focus on developing better rules for the administration of quota licenses.
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs)-Experience
Brazil complained to WTO that EU import scheme for poultry products nullified or impaired any benefits from the TRQ regime.
U.S. has pressured China to reform its TRQs; & US is concerned with Japan’s rice TRQ.
Benefits of TRQ access have been reduced by administration methods (Skully 2001).
WTO (2001) & OECD (2002) stated that quota administration methods have had only a limited influence on fill rates.
Li & Carter find that administration methods do matter in terms of granting market access to exporters.
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Notified Enforced
Source: http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/WTO/trq.htm
18Source: http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/WTO/trq.htm
19Source: Skully
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“small” countryworld price: W
excess demand
in-quotatariff
quotanot binding
quota not bindingbut huge in quotarents
quotabinding
Skully
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TRQ admin = rationingF. trade: CS = A+B+C+D+Rent+TariffTariff: DWL = DTRQ: CS = A; Rent may be dissipated
Skully
D&S left of equib.are inframarginal
In 2007, Japan failed to meet its WTO min access commitment of rice imports. Out of the 682,000 MT quota, approximately 65,000 MT were left unfilled Normally filled by US (~50%); Thailand (~40%); & China (~10%) About 600,000 Mt of MA rice is now going into the feed sector & some into ethanol. 22
Japanese Rice TRQ
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Japanese Wheat Imports by Source (MT)
Year U.S. Share Canada Australia TOTAL
CY 2006 3,002,097 56.2% 1,193,154 1,133,540 5,337,110
CY 2007 3,166,974 60.0% 1,136,261 948,251 5,275,108
CY 2008 3,658,265 63.3% 1,180,784 932,665 5,780,711
Source: Ministry of Finance
Japanese Wheat TRQs
Japanese Gov’t resells imported wheat @ ~ double world price; MAFF uses a Simultaneous-Buy-Sell (SBS) system;Imports about $5.7 mmt per year; $1.14 Billion import rents
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DAIRY TARIFFS WTO bound tariffs
Region Mean Median %
North America 83 45
Central America 68 60
Caribbean 87 100
South America 43 35
European Union 87 70
Non-EU Western Europe 221 93
Eastern Europe 84 51
Middle East 65 35
North Africa 74 87
Sub-Saharan Africa 75 80
Southern Africa 23 22
Asian Pacific Rim 71 30
South Asia 104 100
http://www.ers.usda.gov/db/wto/
China WTO evaluates TRQ administration by two
criteria: nondiscrimination and quota fill. China has TRQs for cotton, wheat, corn &
vegetable oils, etc. U.S. complains China gave quotas for
reprocessing & export rather than domestic consumption, & has allocated the quotas in amounts too small to be commercially viable.
USTR (2008) reported that China’s agric TRQs are not functioning as per accession agreement & they are impaired by inadequate transparency.
Chinese gov’t allegedly allocates quotas to favor state trading enterprises.
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1.117 mmt = 2.457 billion lbs; Or $246 million in rents @ 10¢/lb
Taiwan is a large net importer of sugar (400,000 mt/yr)
Over$30m Rents/yr
Concludes that auctions are the best way to administer a TRQ. 1st-come, first-served & license-on-demand methods present a moderate risk of biased trade. State trading organizations & producer groups that directly administer TRQs can also bias trade. Historical allocation is the method most likely to be discriminatory.
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Skully
Li & Carter Recommendations for the best way to
liberalize agricultural TRQs vary. Abbott and Paarlberg (1998) argued that a
reduction of the above-quota tariff on pork would boost pork imports into the Philippines.
Introduction of TRQs in the EU banana market, for instance, induced a high degree of rent seeking (Herrmann et. al. 2001).
It has been argued that increasing quota volumes would result in greater welfare gains than would tariff reductions in the EU (Bureau and Tangermann 2000). 28
Li & Carter - cont
TRQ fill rates, on average, dropped from 66% in 1995 to 58% in 2002.
Relatively low fill rates suggest that the agric. TRQ regime has not led to a significant improvement in market access.
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Tariff Rate Quotas (TRQs) –Fill Rates
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Fill Rate(y) Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
0 430 10.24 10.24
0<y≤0.1 454 10.81 21.04
0.1<y≤0.2 202 4.81 25.85
0.2<y≤0.3 155 3.69 29.54
0.3<y≤0.4 125 2.98 32.52
0.4<y≤0.5 138 3.28 35.80
0.5<y≤0.6 126 3.00 38.80
0.6<y≤0.7 111 2.64 41.44
0.7<y≤0.8 147 3.50 44.94
0.8<y≤0.9 167 3.98 48.92
0.9<y<1.0 389 9.26 58.18
1 1757 41.82 100.00
Total 4201 100.00
Li & Carter - again Identify factors affecting the performance
of TRQs in terms of improving market access.
Analysis covers individual TRQs notified by 28 WTO member countries from 1995 through 2000.
Results show that reducing in-quota tariffs will significantly improve market access while the market access effect of any reduction in over-quota tariffs is marginal.
Also find that the empirical ranking of the efficiency of alternative TRQ administration methods differs from the theoretical ranking.
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Rank of the Impacts on Fill Rates across Administration Methods
Impacts on Fill Rates
Theoretical Ranking Empirical Results
Low Market allocation AT methods AU
ATOTMXHI
Medium Quasi-market FC methods LD HI
FCPGLD
High Discretionary PG methods ST
STAU
Note: AT = Applied tariffs, AU = Auctioning, FC = 1st-come, 1st served, HI = Historical importers, LD = Licenses on demand,
PG = Producer groups, ST = Imports by state trading enterprises MX = mixed allocation, OT = Other
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