Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters
This review of the empirical literature shows that industries with more intense domestic competition will export more. Competition law enforcement can be traced to export performance and is complementary to trade reforms. Pro-competition market reg...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Brief |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/07/24756300/export-competitiveness http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23658 |
id |
okr-10986-23658 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-236582021-04-23T14:04:16Z Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters Goodwin, Tanja Pierola, Martha Denisse TARIFFS GROWTH RATES TRADE VOLUMES MARKET STRUCTURE SMALL ECONOMIES WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION TARIFF PROTECTION PRODUCT MARKET BARRIER EXPORT SECTORS GLOBAL MARKETS SALES INCOME REGULATORY STANDARDS LAW ENFORCEMENT MARGINAL COST EXPORT PERFORMANCE EMERGING ECONOMIES IMPACT OF TRADE SERVICES MARKETS EXPORTS DOMESTIC MARKET DEVELOPING COUNTRIES TRADE FLOWS EXPORTERS DEVELOPING ECONOMIES ANTITRUST LAW INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MARKET SIZE RETAIL MARKET ANTITRUST POLICY TRADE REFORMS PRICING HOME MARKET MERGERS PRODUCTION STRUCTURES PRICE INPUTS TRADE PERFORMANCE EXPORT RATIOS MARKET ACCESS RETAIL TRADE AGREEMENTS COMMUNICATIONS TRADE PATTERNS PUBLIC POLICY INFLUENCE INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS MARKET CONCENTRATION DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS EXPORT GROWTH TELECOMMUNICATIONS EXPORT INTENSITY REGULATORY BARRIERS NATIONAL COMPETITION PRODUCTS PRODUCTIVITY BARRIERS TO ENTRY MARKETING MARKETS NET EXPORTS WTO CARTEL DOMESTIC COMPETITORS ACCESS TRADE POLICY INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION PRODUCT EXPORT MARKET TRADE POLICIES LIBERALIZATION ECONOMIC RESEARCH NATURAL MONOPOLIES INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS INDIVIDUAL FIRM DOMESTIC MARKETS INTERNATIONAL TRADE REGIONALISM BARRIERS TRADE COSTS COMPETITION POLICY MARKET REGULATION SMALL COUNTRIES VALUE COMPETITIVENESS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT WORLD ECONOMY EXPORT SHARES AGRICULTURE COMPETITION LAW DECISION MAKING ANTITRUST AUTHORITIES SHARES FOREIGN COMPETITORS MARKET TRADE LIBERALIZATION TOTAL SALES MARKET COMPETITION OUTPUT MARKET STRUCTURES COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS ENFORCEMENT ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES TRADE COMPETITION LAW ENFORCEMENT FOREIGN COMPETITION GOODS THEORY MARKET SHARE BILATERAL TRADE INVESTMENT DOMESTIC COMPETITION SHARE INVESTMENT CLIMATE MONOPOLIES TARIFF SUPPLY MARKET POWER PRODUCT MARKETS INVESTMENTS WORLD TRADE COMMUNICATION TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT COSTS PRICE CONTROLS INTERNATIONAL MARKETS PRICES COMPETITION This review of the empirical literature shows that industries with more intense domestic competition will export more. Competition law enforcement can be traced to export performance and is complementary to trade reforms. Pro-competition market regulation that reduces restrictions and promotes competition, where it is viable, is an important determinant for trade. The elimination of barriers to entry and rivalry, and a level playing field in upstream sectors contributes to export competitiveness in downstream manufacturing sectors. In some sectors, effective competition policy can directly lower trade costs. 2016-01-14T19:52:05Z 2016-01-14T19:52:05Z 2015-06 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/07/24756300/export-competitiveness http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23658 English en_US Viewpoint;No. 348 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research |
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 |
TARIFFS GROWTH RATES TRADE VOLUMES MARKET STRUCTURE SMALL ECONOMIES WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION TARIFF PROTECTION PRODUCT MARKET BARRIER EXPORT SECTORS GLOBAL MARKETS SALES INCOME REGULATORY STANDARDS LAW ENFORCEMENT MARGINAL COST EXPORT PERFORMANCE EMERGING ECONOMIES IMPACT OF TRADE SERVICES MARKETS EXPORTS DOMESTIC MARKET DEVELOPING COUNTRIES TRADE FLOWS EXPORTERS DEVELOPING ECONOMIES ANTITRUST LAW INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MARKET SIZE RETAIL MARKET ANTITRUST POLICY TRADE REFORMS PRICING HOME MARKET MERGERS PRODUCTION STRUCTURES PRICE INPUTS TRADE PERFORMANCE EXPORT RATIOS MARKET ACCESS RETAIL TRADE AGREEMENTS COMMUNICATIONS TRADE PATTERNS PUBLIC POLICY INFLUENCE INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS MARKET CONCENTRATION DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS EXPORT GROWTH TELECOMMUNICATIONS EXPORT INTENSITY REGULATORY BARRIERS NATIONAL COMPETITION PRODUCTS PRODUCTIVITY BARRIERS TO ENTRY MARKETING MARKETS NET EXPORTS WTO CARTEL DOMESTIC COMPETITORS ACCESS TRADE POLICY INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION PRODUCT EXPORT MARKET TRADE POLICIES LIBERALIZATION ECONOMIC RESEARCH NATURAL MONOPOLIES INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS INDIVIDUAL FIRM DOMESTIC MARKETS INTERNATIONAL TRADE REGIONALISM BARRIERS TRADE COSTS COMPETITION POLICY MARKET REGULATION SMALL COUNTRIES VALUE COMPETITIVENESS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT WORLD ECONOMY EXPORT SHARES AGRICULTURE COMPETITION LAW DECISION MAKING ANTITRUST AUTHORITIES SHARES FOREIGN COMPETITORS MARKET TRADE LIBERALIZATION TOTAL SALES MARKET COMPETITION OUTPUT MARKET STRUCTURES COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS ENFORCEMENT ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES TRADE COMPETITION LAW ENFORCEMENT FOREIGN COMPETITION GOODS THEORY MARKET SHARE BILATERAL TRADE INVESTMENT DOMESTIC COMPETITION SHARE INVESTMENT CLIMATE MONOPOLIES TARIFF SUPPLY MARKET POWER PRODUCT MARKETS INVESTMENTS WORLD TRADE COMMUNICATION TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT COSTS PRICE CONTROLS INTERNATIONAL MARKETS PRICES COMPETITION |
spellingShingle |
TARIFFS GROWTH RATES TRADE VOLUMES MARKET STRUCTURE SMALL ECONOMIES WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION TARIFF PROTECTION PRODUCT MARKET BARRIER EXPORT SECTORS GLOBAL MARKETS SALES INCOME REGULATORY STANDARDS LAW ENFORCEMENT MARGINAL COST EXPORT PERFORMANCE EMERGING ECONOMIES IMPACT OF TRADE SERVICES MARKETS EXPORTS DOMESTIC MARKET DEVELOPING COUNTRIES TRADE FLOWS EXPORTERS DEVELOPING ECONOMIES ANTITRUST LAW INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MARKET SIZE RETAIL MARKET ANTITRUST POLICY TRADE REFORMS PRICING HOME MARKET MERGERS PRODUCTION STRUCTURES PRICE INPUTS TRADE PERFORMANCE EXPORT RATIOS MARKET ACCESS RETAIL TRADE AGREEMENTS COMMUNICATIONS TRADE PATTERNS PUBLIC POLICY INFLUENCE INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS MARKET CONCENTRATION DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS EXPORT GROWTH TELECOMMUNICATIONS EXPORT INTENSITY REGULATORY BARRIERS NATIONAL COMPETITION PRODUCTS PRODUCTIVITY BARRIERS TO ENTRY MARKETING MARKETS NET EXPORTS WTO CARTEL DOMESTIC COMPETITORS ACCESS TRADE POLICY INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION PRODUCT EXPORT MARKET TRADE POLICIES LIBERALIZATION ECONOMIC RESEARCH NATURAL MONOPOLIES INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS INDIVIDUAL FIRM DOMESTIC MARKETS INTERNATIONAL TRADE REGIONALISM BARRIERS TRADE COSTS COMPETITION POLICY MARKET REGULATION SMALL COUNTRIES VALUE COMPETITIVENESS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT WORLD ECONOMY EXPORT SHARES AGRICULTURE COMPETITION LAW DECISION MAKING ANTITRUST AUTHORITIES SHARES FOREIGN COMPETITORS MARKET TRADE LIBERALIZATION TOTAL SALES MARKET COMPETITION OUTPUT MARKET STRUCTURES COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS ENFORCEMENT ANTITRUST ENFORCEMENT MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES TRADE COMPETITION LAW ENFORCEMENT FOREIGN COMPETITION GOODS THEORY MARKET SHARE BILATERAL TRADE INVESTMENT DOMESTIC COMPETITION SHARE INVESTMENT CLIMATE MONOPOLIES TARIFF SUPPLY MARKET POWER PRODUCT MARKETS INVESTMENTS WORLD TRADE COMMUNICATION TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT COSTS PRICE CONTROLS INTERNATIONAL MARKETS PRICES COMPETITION Goodwin, Tanja Pierola, Martha Denisse Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters |
relation |
Viewpoint;No. 348 |
description |
This review of the empirical literature
shows that industries with more intense domestic competition
will export more. Competition law enforcement can be traced
to export performance and is complementary to trade reforms.
Pro-competition market regulation that reduces restrictions
and promotes competition, where it is viable, is an
important determinant for trade. The elimination of barriers
to entry and rivalry, and a level playing field in upstream
sectors contributes to export competitiveness in downstream
manufacturing sectors. In some sectors, effective
competition policy can directly lower trade costs. |
format |
Brief |
author |
Goodwin, Tanja Pierola, Martha Denisse |
author_facet |
Goodwin, Tanja Pierola, Martha Denisse |
author_sort |
Goodwin, Tanja |
title |
Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters |
title_short |
Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters |
title_full |
Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters |
title_fullStr |
Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters |
title_full_unstemmed |
Export Competitiveness : Why Domestic Market Competition Matters |
title_sort |
export competitiveness : why domestic market competition matters |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/07/24756300/export-competitiveness http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23658 |
_version_ |
1764454458480132096 |