Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy

This paper characterizes the trade-off between the income gains and the inequality costs of trade using survey data for 54 developing countries. Tariff data on agricultural and manufacturing goods are combined with household survey data on detailed...

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Main Authors: Artuc, Erhan, Rijkers, Bob, Porto, Guido
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/652031555935857693/Trading-off-the-Income-Gains-and-the-Inequality-Costs-of-Trade-Policy
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31580
id okr-10986-31580
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-315802022-09-19T12:16:26Z Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy Artuc, Erhan Rijkers, Bob Porto, Guido TRADE POLICY POVERTY INEQUALITY HOUSEHOLD WELFARE SOCIAL WELFARE TRADE LIBERALIZATION This paper characterizes the trade-off between the income gains and the inequality costs of trade using survey data for 54 developing countries. Tariff data on agricultural and manufacturing goods are combined with household survey data on detailed income and expenditure patterns to estimate the first-order effects of the elimination of import tariffs on household welfare. The paper assesses how these welfare effects vary across the distribution by estimating impacts on the consumption of traded goods, wage income, farm and non-farm family enterprise income, and government transfers. For each country, the income gains and the inequality costs of trade liberalization are quantified and the trade-offs between them are assessed using an Atkinson social welfare index. The analysis finds average income gains from import tariff liberalization in 45 countries and average income losses in nine countries. Across countries in the sample, the gains from trade are 1.9 percent of real household expenditure on average. We find overwhelming evidence of a trade-off between the income gains (losses) and the inequality costs (gains), which arise because trade tends to exacerbate income inequality: 45 countries face a trade-off, while only nine do not. The income gains typically more than offset the increase in inequality. In the majority of developing countries, the prevailing tariff structure thus induces sizable welfare losses. 2019-04-25T13:45:26Z 2019-04-25T13:45:26Z 2019-04 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/652031555935857693/Trading-off-the-Income-Gains-and-the-Inequality-Costs-of-Trade-Policy http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31580 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8825 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic TRADE POLICY
POVERTY
INEQUALITY
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
SOCIAL WELFARE
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
spellingShingle TRADE POLICY
POVERTY
INEQUALITY
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
SOCIAL WELFARE
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
Artuc, Erhan
Rijkers, Bob
Porto, Guido
Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8825
description This paper characterizes the trade-off between the income gains and the inequality costs of trade using survey data for 54 developing countries. Tariff data on agricultural and manufacturing goods are combined with household survey data on detailed income and expenditure patterns to estimate the first-order effects of the elimination of import tariffs on household welfare. The paper assesses how these welfare effects vary across the distribution by estimating impacts on the consumption of traded goods, wage income, farm and non-farm family enterprise income, and government transfers. For each country, the income gains and the inequality costs of trade liberalization are quantified and the trade-offs between them are assessed using an Atkinson social welfare index. The analysis finds average income gains from import tariff liberalization in 45 countries and average income losses in nine countries. Across countries in the sample, the gains from trade are 1.9 percent of real household expenditure on average. We find overwhelming evidence of a trade-off between the income gains (losses) and the inequality costs (gains), which arise because trade tends to exacerbate income inequality: 45 countries face a trade-off, while only nine do not. The income gains typically more than offset the increase in inequality. In the majority of developing countries, the prevailing tariff structure thus induces sizable welfare losses.
format Working Paper
author Artuc, Erhan
Rijkers, Bob
Porto, Guido
author_facet Artuc, Erhan
Rijkers, Bob
Porto, Guido
author_sort Artuc, Erhan
title Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy
title_short Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy
title_full Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy
title_fullStr Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy
title_full_unstemmed Trading Off the Income Gains and the Inequality Costs of Trade Policy
title_sort trading off the income gains and the inequality costs of trade policy
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/652031555935857693/Trading-off-the-Income-Gains-and-the-Inequality-Costs-of-Trade-Policy
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31580
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