Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania

Discrepancies in bilateral trade statistics for forest products have recently attracted attention as potential indicators of illegal trade practices. For example, if exporters understate quantities to evade export taxes or quotas, then one might ex...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vincent, Jeffrey R.
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/04/4133622/detecting-illegal-trade-practices-analyzing-discrepancies-forest-products-trade-statistics-application-europe-focus-romania
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14104
id okr-10986-14104
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-141042021-04-23T14:03:20Z Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania Vincent, Jeffrey R. TRADE; LUMBER TRADE; BILATERAL TRADE; FOREST PRODUCTS; FORESTRY INDUSTRY; LOGGING; SAWNWOOD AGRICULTURE BILATERAL TRADE CUSTOMS ECONOMETRIC ANALYSES ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS ECONOMETRIC MODELS ECONOMISTS EXCHANGE RATE EXPORT PRICES EXPORT TAXES EXPORTERS EXPORTS FORESTRY GOVERNMENT REGULATION IMPORT TARIFFS IMPORTS INSURANCE LOGGING Discrepancies in bilateral trade statistics for forest products have recently attracted attention as potential indicators of illegal trade practices. For example, if exporters understate quantities to evade export taxes or quotas, then one might expect reported exports to be less than reported imports. Discrepancies in trade statistics can exist for reasons that have nothing to do with illegal activities, however, such as measurement error and shipment lags. Any attempt to infer evidence of illegal activities from statistical discrepancies must control for these other explanations. The author estimates the discrepancies between reported imports and exports for bilateral flows of sawnwood traded by Romania and other European countries. The author also examines whether these discrepancies reflect illegal activities by the traders. The mean discrepancy for sawnwood exported by Romania during 1982-97 was significantly different from zero for coniferous sawnwood but not for nonconiferous sawnwood. Yet the sign of the discrepancy for coniferous sawnwood-reported exports tended to be greater than reported imports-implies that illegal trade activities were more likely occurring in Romania's trading partners than in Romania. An econometric analysis of bilateral trade statistics for Romania and other European countries finds evidence that measurement error, shipment lags, and intentional underreporting all play a role in explaining discrepancies for both types of sawnwood. The econometric model is not sufficiently reliable, however, for estimating the portion that was due solely to illegal activities or determining whether those activities occurred primarily in Romania or in its trading partners. Moreover, given that it is based on observed discrepancies in bilateral trade statistics, it fails to detect illegal trade activities that occur simultaneously in both importing and exporting countries. For these reasons, econometric methods appear unlikely to be of practical use in revealing illegal trade activities in the Romanian forest sector. 2013-06-21T13:26:27Z 2013-06-21T13:26:27Z 2004-04 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/04/4133622/detecting-illegal-trade-practices-analyzing-discrepancies-forest-products-trade-statistics-application-europe-focus-romania http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14104 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No.3261 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, D.C. Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Europe and Central Asia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic TRADE; LUMBER TRADE; BILATERAL TRADE; FOREST PRODUCTS; FORESTRY INDUSTRY; LOGGING; SAWNWOOD AGRICULTURE
BILATERAL TRADE
CUSTOMS
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSES
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMETRIC MODELS
ECONOMISTS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPORT PRICES
EXPORT TAXES
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
FORESTRY
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
IMPORT TARIFFS
IMPORTS
INSURANCE
LOGGING
spellingShingle TRADE; LUMBER TRADE; BILATERAL TRADE; FOREST PRODUCTS; FORESTRY INDUSTRY; LOGGING; SAWNWOOD AGRICULTURE
BILATERAL TRADE
CUSTOMS
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSES
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMETRIC MODELS
ECONOMISTS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPORT PRICES
EXPORT TAXES
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
FORESTRY
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
IMPORT TARIFFS
IMPORTS
INSURANCE
LOGGING
Vincent, Jeffrey R.
Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No.3261
description Discrepancies in bilateral trade statistics for forest products have recently attracted attention as potential indicators of illegal trade practices. For example, if exporters understate quantities to evade export taxes or quotas, then one might expect reported exports to be less than reported imports. Discrepancies in trade statistics can exist for reasons that have nothing to do with illegal activities, however, such as measurement error and shipment lags. Any attempt to infer evidence of illegal activities from statistical discrepancies must control for these other explanations. The author estimates the discrepancies between reported imports and exports for bilateral flows of sawnwood traded by Romania and other European countries. The author also examines whether these discrepancies reflect illegal activities by the traders. The mean discrepancy for sawnwood exported by Romania during 1982-97 was significantly different from zero for coniferous sawnwood but not for nonconiferous sawnwood. Yet the sign of the discrepancy for coniferous sawnwood-reported exports tended to be greater than reported imports-implies that illegal trade activities were more likely occurring in Romania's trading partners than in Romania. An econometric analysis of bilateral trade statistics for Romania and other European countries finds evidence that measurement error, shipment lags, and intentional underreporting all play a role in explaining discrepancies for both types of sawnwood. The econometric model is not sufficiently reliable, however, for estimating the portion that was due solely to illegal activities or determining whether those activities occurred primarily in Romania or in its trading partners. Moreover, given that it is based on observed discrepancies in bilateral trade statistics, it fails to detect illegal trade activities that occur simultaneously in both importing and exporting countries. For these reasons, econometric methods appear unlikely to be of practical use in revealing illegal trade activities in the Romanian forest sector.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Vincent, Jeffrey R.
author_facet Vincent, Jeffrey R.
author_sort Vincent, Jeffrey R.
title Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania
title_short Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania
title_full Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania
title_fullStr Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania
title_full_unstemmed Detecting Illegal Trade Practices by Analyzing Discrepancies in Forest Products Trade Statistics: An Application to Europe, With a Focus on Romania
title_sort detecting illegal trade practices by analyzing discrepancies in forest products trade statistics: an application to europe, with a focus on romania
publisher World Bank, Washington, D.C.
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/04/4133622/detecting-illegal-trade-practices-analyzing-discrepancies-forest-products-trade-statistics-application-europe-focus-romania
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14104
_version_ 1764430196508721152