Read this summary of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which evolved into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995 and currently has 164 members. The WTO is a forum for governments to negotiate trade agreements and settle trade disputes. It operates an international system of trade rules. They are contracts that bind governments to keep their trade policies within agreed limits. Its goal is to "help producers of goods and services, exporters, and importers conduct their business while allowing governments to meet social and environmental objectives". (WTO)
Understanding Tariffs
The
most common way to protect one's economy from import competition is to
implement a tariff: a tax on imports. Generally speaking, a tariff is
any tax or fee collected by a government. Sometimes the term "tariff" is
used in a nontrade context, as in railroad tariffs. However, the term
is more commonly used to refer to a tax on imported goods.
Tariffs
have been applied by countries for centuries and have been one of the
most common methods used to collect revenue for governments. Largely
this is because it is relatively simple to place customs officials at
the border of a country and collect a fee on goods that enter.
Administratively, a tariff is probably one of the easiest taxes to
collect. (Of course, high tariffs may induce the smuggling of goods through
nontraditional entry points, but we will ignore that problem here).
Tariffs
are worth defining early in an international trade course since changes
in tariffs represent the primary way countries either
liberalize trade or protect their economies. It isn't the only way,
though, since countries also implement subsidies, quotas, and other
types of regulations that can affect trade flows between countries.
These other methods will be defined and discussed later, but for now it
suffices to understand tariffs since they still represent the basic
policy affecting international trade patterns.
When people talk
about trade liberalization, they generally mean reducing the tariffs on
imported goods, thereby allowing the products to enter at lower cost.
Since lowering the cost of trade makes it more profitable, it will make
trade freer. A complete elimination of tariffs and other barriers to
trade is what economists and others mean by free trade. In contrast, any
increase in tariffs is referred to as protection, or protectionism.
Because tariffs raise the cost of importing products from abroad but not
from domestic firms, they have the effect of protecting the domestic
firms that compete with imported products. These domestic firms are
called import competitors.
There are two basic ways in which
tariffs may be levied: specific tariffs and ad valorem tariffs. A
specific tariff is levied as a fixed charge per unit of imports. For
example, the U.S. government levies a $0.51 specific tariff on every
wristwatch imported into the United States. Thus, if one thousand
watches are imported, the U.S. government collects $510 in tariff
revenue. In this case, $510 is collected whether the watch is a $40
Swatch or a $5,000 Rolex.
An ad valorem tariff is levied as a
fixed percentage of the value of the commodity imported. "Ad valorem" is
Latin for "on value" or "in proportion to the value". The United States levies a 2.5 percent ad valorem tariff on imported
automobiles. Thus, if $100,000 worth of automobiles are imported, the
U.S. government collects $2,500 in tariff revenue. In this case, $2,500
is collected whether two $50,000 BMWs or ten $10,000 Hyundais are
imported.
Occasionally, both a specific and an ad valorem tariff
are levied on the same product simultaneously. This is known as a
two-part tariff. For example, wristwatches imported into the United
States face the $0.51 specific tariff as well as a 6.25 percent ad
valorem tariff on the case and the strap and a 5.3 percent ad valorem
tariff on the battery. Perhaps this should be called a three-part
tariff!
As the above examples suggest, different tariffs are
generally applied to different commodities. Governments rarely apply the
same tariff to all goods and services imported into the country.
Several countries prove the exception, though. For example, Chile levies
a 6 percent tariff on every imported good, regardless of the category.
Similarly, the United Arab Emirates sets a 5 percent tariff on almost
all items, while Bolivia levies tariffs at zero percent, 2.5
percent, 5 percent, 7.5 percent, or 10 percent. Nonetheless, simple and
constant tariffs such as these are uncommon.
Thus, instead of one
tariff rate, countries have a tariff schedule that specifies the tariff
collected on every particular good and service. In the United States,
the tariff schedule is called the Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) of
the United States. The commodity classifications are based on the
international Harmonized Commodity Coding and Classification System (or
the Harmonized System) established by the World Customs Organization.
Measuring Protectionism: Average Tariff Rates Around the World
One
method used to measure the degree of protectionism within an economy is
the average tariff rate. Since tariffs generally reduce imports of
foreign products, the higher the tariff, the greater the protection
afforded to the country's import-competing industries. At one time,
tariffs were perhaps the most commonly applied trade policy. Many
countries used tariffs as a primary source of funds for their government
budgets. However, as trade liberalization advanced in the second half
of the twentieth century, many other types of nontariff barriers became
more prominent.
Table 1.1, "Average Tariffs in Selected Countries
(2009)," provides a list of average tariff rates in selected countries
around the world. These rates were calculated as the simple average
tariff across more than five thousand product categories in each
country's applied tariff schedule located on the World Trade
Organization (WTO) Web site. The countries are ordered by highest to
lowest per capita income.
Country | Average Tariff Rates (%) |
---|---|
United States | 3.6 |
Canada | 3.6 |
European Community (EC) | 4.3 |
Japan | 3.1 |
South Korea | 11.3 |
Mexico | 12.5 |
Chile | 6.0 (uniform) |
Argentina | 11.2 |
Brazil | 13.6 |
Thailand | 9.1 |
China | 9.95 |
Egypt | 17.0 |
Philippines | 6.3 |
India | 15.0 |
Kenya | 12.7 |
Ghana | 13.1 |
Table 1.1 Average Tariffs in Selected Countries (2009)
Generally
speaking, average tariff rates are less than 20 percent in most
countries, although they are often quite a bit higher for agricultural
commodities. In the most developed countries, average tariffs are less
than 10 percent and often less than 5 percent. On average,
less-developed countries maintain higher tariff barriers, but many
countries that have recently joined the WTO have reduced their tariffs
substantially to gain entry.
Problems Using Average Tariffs as a Measure of Protection
The
first problem with using average tariffs as a measure of protection in a
country is that there are several different ways to calculate an
average tariff rate, and each method can give a very different
impression about the level of protection.
The tariffs in Table
1.1 "Average Tariffs in Selected Countries (2009)" are calculated as a
simple average. To calculate this rate, one simply adds up all the
tariff rates and divides by the number of import categories. One problem
with this method arises if a country has most of its trade in a few
categories with zero tariffs but has high tariffs in many categories it
would never find advantageous to import. In this case, the average
tariff may overstate the degree of protection in the economy.
This
problem can be avoided, to a certain extent, if one calculates the
trade-weighted average tariff. This measure weighs each tariff by the
share of total imports in that import category. Thus, if a country has
most of its imports in a category with very low tariffs but has many
import categories with high tariffs and virtually no imports, then the
trade-weighted average tariff would indicate a low level of protection.
The simple way to calculate a trade-weighted average tariff rate is to
divide the total tariff revenue by the total value of imports. Since
these data are regularly reported by many countries, this is a common
way to report average tariffs. To illustrate the difference, the United
States is listed in Table 1.1 "Average Tariffs in Selected Countries
(2009)" with a simple average tariff of 3.6 percent. However, in 2008
the U.S. tariff revenue collected came to $29.2 billion from imports of
goods totaling $2,126 billion, meaning that the U.S. trade-weighted
average tariff was a mere 1.4 percent.
Nonetheless, the
trade-weighted average tariff is not without flaws. For example, suppose
a country has relatively little trade because it has prohibitive
tariffs (i.e., tariffs set so high as to eliminate imports) in many
import categories. If it has some trade in a few import categories with
relatively low tariffs, then the trade-weighted average tariff would be
relatively low. After all, there would be no tariff revenue in the
categories with prohibitive tariffs. In this case, a low average tariff
could be reported for a highly protectionist country. Also, in this
case, the simple average tariff would register as a higher average
tariff and might be a better indicator of the level of protection in the
economy.
Of course, the best way to overstate the degree of protection is to use the average tariff rate on dutiable imports. This alternative measure, which is sometimes reported, only considers categories in which a tariff is actually levied and ignores all categories in which the tariff is set to zero. Since many countries today have many categories of goods with zero tariffs applied, this measure would give a higher estimate of average tariffs than most of the other measures.
The second major problem with using average tariff rates to measure the degree of protection is that tariffs are not the only trade policy used by countries. Countries also implement quotas, import licenses, voluntary export restraints, export taxes, export subsidies, government procurement policies, domestic content rules, and much more. In addition, there are a variety of domestic regulations that, for large economies at least, can and do have an impact on trade flows. None of these regulations, restrictions, or impediments to trade, affecting both imports and exports, would be captured using any of the average tariff measures. Nevertheless, these nontariff barriers can have a much greater effect on trade flows than tariffs themselves.
Key Takeaways
- Specific tariffs are assessed as a money charge per unit of the imported good.
- Ad valorem tariffs are assessed as a percentage of the value of the imported good.
- Average tariffs can be measured as a simple average across product categories or weighted by the level of imports.
- Although average tariffs are used to measure the degree of protection or openness of a country, neither measure is best because each measure has unique problems.
- In general, average tariffs are higher in developing countries and lower in developed countries.