Effects of Trade Liberalization on Textile and Apparel Exports from Sub-Sahara Africa
This paper estimates the impact of market access liberalization in high-income countries on sub-Saharan African exports. The methodology exploits the large reduction in trade barriers that was induced by three unilateral trade liberalization initia...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2019
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/466961562786318149/Effects-of-Trade-Liberalization-on-Textile-and-Apparel-Exports-from-Sub-Sahara-Africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32056 |
Summary: | This paper estimates the impact of
market access liberalization in high-income countries on
sub-Saharan African exports. The methodology exploits the
large reduction in trade barriers that was induced by three
unilateral trade liberalization initiatives: (1) the
dismantling of the Multi-Fiber Arrangement, (2) the African
Growth and Opportunity Act in the United States, and (3) the
extension of EU trade preferences for developed countries
through its Everything-but-Arms program and the General
System of Preferences. Using detailed product-level
information at the 6-digit level of the Harmonized System
and a triple-difference empirical specification, the usual
endogeneity-of-policy critique is flexibly controlled for.
The results indicate strongly positive export effects, which
are especially large for textile, apparel, and leather
products, and tend to be realized fully within 5 years. Each
percentage point reduction in import tariffs raises exports
to the EU by 0.73 percent and to the United States by 0.30
percent; effects are two to three times as large for
textiles. The presence of strong Chinese imports has
ambiguous effects on countries' ability to take
advantage of trade liberalization as the impact on the
export effects to the EU and the United States show an
opposite sign. |
---|