The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries

Since the 1995 inception of the World Trade Organization (WTO), developing countries have become some of the most frequent users of the WTO-sanctioned antidumping trade policy instrument. This paper exploits newly available data to examine the pattern of actual industrial use of antidumping in nine...

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Main Author: Bown, Chad P.
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
ITC
WTO
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/09/7071163/world-trade-organization-antidumping-developing-countries
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9305
id okr-10986-9305
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-93052021-04-23T14:02:41Z The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries Bown, Chad P. AD VALOREM ANTIDUMPING ANTIDUMPING CODE ANTIDUMPING DATABASE ANTIDUMPING LAWS ANTIDUMPING MEASURES ANTIDUMPING POLICY ANTIDUMPING PROCESS ANTIDUMPING RULES BENCHMARK CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS CAPITAL INVESTMENT CASE-BY-CASE BASIS COLLUSION COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE COMPETITION POLICY CONSTRUCTION CONSUMER PREFERENCES CONTRACTING PARTIES CUMULATIVE EFFECTS CURRENCY DEMAND ELASTICITIES DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DISPUTE SETTLEMENT DISPUTE SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES DOMESTIC ANTIDUMPING LAW DOMESTIC AUTHORITIES DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES DOMESTIC INDUSTRY DOMESTIC MARKET DOMESTIC PRICES DUMPED IMPORTS ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIC RESEARCH ECONOMIC WELFARE ECONOMICS RESEARCH EVIDENTIARY REQUIREMENTS EXCHANGE RATE EXPORT PRICE EXPORT SALES EXPORT VALUE EXPORTERS EXPORTING COUNTRIES EXPORTS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION FIXED COSTS FOREIGN COMPETITION FOREIGN EXPORTERS FOREIGN FIRM FORMAL ANALYSIS FREE RIDER FREE RIDER PROBLEM GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION HOME MARKET IMPORT COMPETITION IMPORT PENETRATION IMPORT PRICES IMPORT PROTECTION IMPORT RESTRICTION IMPORT RESTRICTIONS IMPORT VALUE IMPORTED PRODUCTS IMPORTING COUNTRIES INDUSTRIAL USE INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTERNATIONAL TRADING SYSTEM INVENTORIES INVESTIGATING AUTHORITY ITC LEGAL PROCEEDINGS MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS MARGINAL EFFECTS MARKET SHARE MATERIAL INJURY NATIONAL ANTIDUMPING LAWS NATIONAL AUTHORITIES NATIONAL AUTHORITY NON-TARIFF BARRIERS POLICY RESEARCH POLITICAL ECONOMY PRICE DISCRIMINATION PRICE UNDERTAKING REAL EXCHANGE RATES REAL GDP TARIFF BARRIERS TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICIES TRADE POLICY TRADE RESTRICTION TRADE RESTRICTIONS VALUE ADDED VALUE OF IMPORTS WAGES WORLD TRADE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION WTO Since the 1995 inception of the World Trade Organization (WTO), developing countries have become some of the most frequent users of the WTO-sanctioned antidumping trade policy instrument. This paper exploits newly available data to examine the pattern of actual industrial use of antidumping in nine of the major "new user" developing countries - Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Peru, Turkey and Venezuela. For these countries we are able to match data from two newly available sources: data on production in 28 different 3-digit ISIC industries from the Trade, Production and Protection Database to data on antidumping investigations, outcomes and imports at the 6-digit Harmonized System (HS) product level from the Global Antidumping Database. Our econometric analysis is to estimate a two-stage model of the industry-level decision to pursue an antidumping investigation and the national government's decision of whether and how much antidumping import protection to provide. First, we find evidence consistent with the theory of endogenous trade policy: larger industries that face substantial import competition are more likely to pursue an antidumping investigation, and larger and more concentrated industries receive greater antidumping protection from imports. Second, we find that industries that use antidumping are more likely to face the changing economic conditions specified by the technical evidentiary criteria of the WTO Antidumping Agreement: industries that face rapidly falling import prices are more likely to pursue an investigation, and industries that are more susceptible to cyclical dumping due to greater capital investment expenditures and that face rapidly increasing competition from imports receive greater antidumping protection. 2012-06-27T14:02:37Z 2012-06-27T14:02:37Z 2006-09 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/09/7071163/world-trade-organization-antidumping-developing-countries http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9305 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper; No. 4014 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper 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 AD VALOREM
ANTIDUMPING
ANTIDUMPING CODE
ANTIDUMPING DATABASE
ANTIDUMPING LAWS
ANTIDUMPING MEASURES
ANTIDUMPING POLICY
ANTIDUMPING PROCESS
ANTIDUMPING RULES
BENCHMARK
CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
CASE-BY-CASE BASIS
COLLUSION
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITION POLICY
CONSTRUCTION
CONSUMER PREFERENCES
CONTRACTING PARTIES
CUMULATIVE EFFECTS
CURRENCY
DEMAND ELASTICITIES
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DISPUTE SETTLEMENT
DISPUTE SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES
DOMESTIC ANTIDUMPING LAW
DOMESTIC AUTHORITIES
DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES
DOMESTIC INDUSTRY
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC PRICES
DUMPED IMPORTS
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC WELFARE
ECONOMICS RESEARCH
EVIDENTIARY REQUIREMENTS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPORT PRICE
EXPORT SALES
EXPORT VALUE
EXPORTERS
EXPORTING COUNTRIES
EXPORTS
FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
FIXED COSTS
FOREIGN COMPETITION
FOREIGN EXPORTERS
FOREIGN FIRM
FORMAL ANALYSIS
FREE RIDER
FREE RIDER PROBLEM
GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS
GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
HOME MARKET
IMPORT COMPETITION
IMPORT PENETRATION
IMPORT PRICES
IMPORT PROTECTION
IMPORT RESTRICTION
IMPORT RESTRICTIONS
IMPORT VALUE
IMPORTED PRODUCTS
IMPORTING COUNTRIES
INDUSTRIAL USE
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRADING SYSTEM
INVENTORIES
INVESTIGATING AUTHORITY
ITC
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
MARGINAL EFFECTS
MARKET SHARE
MATERIAL INJURY
NATIONAL ANTIDUMPING LAWS
NATIONAL AUTHORITIES
NATIONAL AUTHORITY
NON-TARIFF BARRIERS
POLICY RESEARCH
POLITICAL ECONOMY
PRICE DISCRIMINATION
PRICE UNDERTAKING
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
REAL GDP
TARIFF BARRIERS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE POLICIES
TRADE POLICY
TRADE RESTRICTION
TRADE RESTRICTIONS
VALUE ADDED
VALUE OF IMPORTS
WAGES
WORLD TRADE
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
WTO
spellingShingle AD VALOREM
ANTIDUMPING
ANTIDUMPING CODE
ANTIDUMPING DATABASE
ANTIDUMPING LAWS
ANTIDUMPING MEASURES
ANTIDUMPING POLICY
ANTIDUMPING PROCESS
ANTIDUMPING RULES
BENCHMARK
CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
CASE-BY-CASE BASIS
COLLUSION
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITION POLICY
CONSTRUCTION
CONSUMER PREFERENCES
CONTRACTING PARTIES
CUMULATIVE EFFECTS
CURRENCY
DEMAND ELASTICITIES
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DISPUTE SETTLEMENT
DISPUTE SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES
DOMESTIC ANTIDUMPING LAW
DOMESTIC AUTHORITIES
DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES
DOMESTIC INDUSTRY
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC PRICES
DUMPED IMPORTS
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC WELFARE
ECONOMICS RESEARCH
EVIDENTIARY REQUIREMENTS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPORT PRICE
EXPORT SALES
EXPORT VALUE
EXPORTERS
EXPORTING COUNTRIES
EXPORTS
FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
FIXED COSTS
FOREIGN COMPETITION
FOREIGN EXPORTERS
FOREIGN FIRM
FORMAL ANALYSIS
FREE RIDER
FREE RIDER PROBLEM
GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS
GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
HOME MARKET
IMPORT COMPETITION
IMPORT PENETRATION
IMPORT PRICES
IMPORT PROTECTION
IMPORT RESTRICTION
IMPORT RESTRICTIONS
IMPORT VALUE
IMPORTED PRODUCTS
IMPORTING COUNTRIES
INDUSTRIAL USE
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRADING SYSTEM
INVENTORIES
INVESTIGATING AUTHORITY
ITC
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
MARGINAL EFFECTS
MARKET SHARE
MATERIAL INJURY
NATIONAL ANTIDUMPING LAWS
NATIONAL AUTHORITIES
NATIONAL AUTHORITY
NON-TARIFF BARRIERS
POLICY RESEARCH
POLITICAL ECONOMY
PRICE DISCRIMINATION
PRICE UNDERTAKING
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
REAL GDP
TARIFF BARRIERS
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE POLICIES
TRADE POLICY
TRADE RESTRICTION
TRADE RESTRICTIONS
VALUE ADDED
VALUE OF IMPORTS
WAGES
WORLD TRADE
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
WTO
Bown, Chad P.
The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries
relation Policy Research Working Paper; No. 4014
description Since the 1995 inception of the World Trade Organization (WTO), developing countries have become some of the most frequent users of the WTO-sanctioned antidumping trade policy instrument. This paper exploits newly available data to examine the pattern of actual industrial use of antidumping in nine of the major "new user" developing countries - Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Peru, Turkey and Venezuela. For these countries we are able to match data from two newly available sources: data on production in 28 different 3-digit ISIC industries from the Trade, Production and Protection Database to data on antidumping investigations, outcomes and imports at the 6-digit Harmonized System (HS) product level from the Global Antidumping Database. Our econometric analysis is to estimate a two-stage model of the industry-level decision to pursue an antidumping investigation and the national government's decision of whether and how much antidumping import protection to provide. First, we find evidence consistent with the theory of endogenous trade policy: larger industries that face substantial import competition are more likely to pursue an antidumping investigation, and larger and more concentrated industries receive greater antidumping protection from imports. Second, we find that industries that use antidumping are more likely to face the changing economic conditions specified by the technical evidentiary criteria of the WTO Antidumping Agreement: industries that face rapidly falling import prices are more likely to pursue an investigation, and industries that are more susceptible to cyclical dumping due to greater capital investment expenditures and that face rapidly increasing competition from imports receive greater antidumping protection.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Bown, Chad P.
author_facet Bown, Chad P.
author_sort Bown, Chad P.
title The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries
title_short The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries
title_full The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries
title_fullStr The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries
title_full_unstemmed The World Trade Organization and Antidumping in Developing Countries
title_sort world trade organization and antidumping in developing countries
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/09/7071163/world-trade-organization-antidumping-developing-countries
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9305
_version_ 1764406576746070016