Anti-dumping, Intra-industry Trade and Quality Reversals
November 2004
Research Paper
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(2004-1242.pdf, 1.0MB) |
We examine an export game where two firms (home and foreign), located in two different countries, produce vertically differentiated products. The foreign firm is the most efficient in terms of R&D costs of quality development and the foreign country is relatively larger and endowed with a relatively higher income. The unique (risk-dominant) Nash equilibrium involves intra-industry trade where the foreign producer manufactures a good of higher quality than the domestic firm. This equilibrium is characterized by unilateral dumping by the foreign firm into the domestic economy. Two instruments of anti-dumping (AD) policy are examined, namely, a price undertaking (PU) and an anti-dumping duty. We show that, when firms' cost asymmetries are low and countries differ substantially in size, a PU leads to a quality reversal in the international market, which gives a rationale for the domestic government to enact AD law. We also establish an equivalence result between the effects of an AD duty and a PU.
- F13 : Commercial Policy; Protection; Promotion; Trade Negotiations; International Organizations
- F12 : Models of Trade with Imperfect Competition and Scale Economies
- quality
- price
- home firm
- trade
- country
- equilibrium
- market
- price undertaking
- export
- profit
- undertaking
- cost asymmetries
- quality leader
- intra-industry trade
- result
- condition
- product
- consumer
- asymmetrie
- policy