Global Value Chains and Deep Integration

How does trade affect the design of preferential trade agreements (PTAs)? What is the role of global value chains (GVCs)? The authors answer these questions by empirically investigating the causal impact of gross and value-added trade on the depth of PTAs. To solve the critical issue of endogeneity of trade flows for trade policy, the identification strategy exploits a recent transportation shock: the sharp increase in the maximum size of container ships, which has more than tripled between 1995 and 2007. The key variation in our instrument hinges on the fact that only deep-water ports can accommodate new larger ships. The strategy is flexible enough to generate excludable instruments for different value-added components of exports. This allows us to assess how the design (depth) of PTAs is affected not only by gross exports but more specifically by GVC-trade as captured by indicators of trade in domestic and foreign value added. The authors find that trade occurring through GVCs increases the probability of forming deep PTAs, i.e., agreements that include provisions that go beyond the coverage of the WTO. These GVC-trade effects are larger than those of gross exports, which include flows that are unrelated to GVCs. The results indicate that GVCs are one important driver of deep preferential liberalization.

[1]  H. Kox,et al.  How trade and investment agreements affect bilateral foreign direct investment: Results from a structural gravity model , 2020 .

[2]  A. Mattoo,et al.  Handbook of Deep Trade Agreements , 2020 .

[3]  M. Zanardi,et al.  Global Value Chains and the Removal of Trade Protection , 2020, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[4]  Stephen Weymouth,et al.  The service economy: U.S. trade coalitions in an era of deindustrialization , 2019, The Review of International Organizations.

[5]  S. Miroudot,et al.  Preferential Trade Agreements and Multinational Production , 2019, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[6]  C. Altomonte,et al.  Trade and Growth in the Age of Global Value Chains , 2018 .

[7]  J. Hollyer,et al.  Cooperative Autocracies: Leader Survival, Creditworthiness, and Bilateral Investment Treaties* , 2018, American Journal of Political Science.

[8]  Alberto Osnago,et al.  Deep Trade Agreements and Global Value Chains , 2018, Review of Industrial Organization.

[9]  Iain Osgood Globalizing the Supply Chain: Firm and Industrial Support for US Trade Agreements , 2018, International Organization.

[10]  D. Rodrik What Do Trade Agreements Really Do? , 2018 .

[11]  Pablo M. Pinto,et al.  The Distributional Consequences of Preferential Trade Liberalization: Firm-Level Evidence , 2017, International Organization.

[12]  Nadia Rocha,et al.  Do Deep Trade Agreements Boost Vertical FDI , 2016 .

[13]  K. Rönnbäck Interest-group lobbying for free trade: An empirical case study of international trade policy formation , 2015 .

[14]  J. Bergstrand,et al.  Economic integration agreements and the margins of international trade , 2014 .

[15]  Michael Tomz,et al.  Conditional Cooperation and Climate Change , 2014 .

[16]  Todd L. Allee,et al.  Evaluating Three Explanations for the Design of Bilateral Investment Treaties , 2014 .

[17]  Zhi Wang,et al.  Quantifying International Production Sharing at the Bilateral and Sector Levels , 2013 .

[18]  Andreas Dür,et al.  The design of international trade agreements: Introducing a new dataset , 2012, The Review of International Organizations.

[19]  Emily Blanchard,et al.  U.S. Multinationals and Preferential Market Access , 2012, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[20]  R. Baldwin,et al.  World Trade Organization Economic Research and Statistics Division 21 st Century Regionalism : Filling the gap between 21 st century trade and 20 th century trade rules , 2010 .

[21]  M. Manger Investing in Protection: The Politics of Preferential Trade Agreements between North and South , 2009 .

[22]  B. Simmons Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in Domestic Politics , 2009 .

[23]  A. Sapir,et al.  Beyond the WTO? An Anatomy of EU and US Preferential Trade Agreements , 2009 .

[24]  Helen V. Milner,et al.  The Politics of Foreign Direct Investment into Developing Countries: Increasing FDI through International Trade Agreements? , 2008 .

[25]  E. Reinhardt,et al.  International Institutions and the Volatility of International Trade , 2008, International Organization.

[26]  T. Mayer,et al.  The Erosion of Colonial Trade Linkages after Independence , 2008 .

[27]  R. Staiger,et al.  Offshoring and the Role of Trade Agreements , 2008 .

[28]  M. Bombardini Firm heterogeneity and lobby participation , 2008 .

[29]  J. Vreeland Political Institutions and Human Rights: Why Dictatorships Enter into the United Nations Convention Against Torture , 2008, International Organization.

[30]  Emily Blanchard Foreign Direct Investment, Endogenous Tariffs, and Preferential Trade Agreements. , 2005 .

[31]  K. Chase,et al.  Economic Interests and Regional Trading Arrangements: The Case of NAFTA , 2003, International Organization.

[32]  Duncan Snidal,et al.  The Rational Design of International Institutions , 2001, International Organization.

[33]  Kenneth W. Abbott,et al.  The Concept of Legalization , 2000, International Organization.

[34]  A. Rodrı́guez-Clare,et al.  The Value of Trade Agreements in the presence of Political pressures , 1998, Journal of Political Economy.

[35]  Simeon Djankov,et al.  Effective protection and investment incentives in Egypt and Jordan during the transition to free trade With Europe , 1997 .

[36]  Robert C. Johnson,et al.  Global Value Chains and Trade Policy∗ , 2017 .

[37]  Andreas Dür,et al.  Trade cooperation : the purpose, design and effects of preferential trade agreements World Trade Forum , 2015 .

[38]  R. Staiger,et al.  Offshoring and the Role of Trade Agreements † , 2012 .

[39]  W. Mattli The Logic of Regional Integration Europe and Beyond , 1998 .