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FREE TRADE HAS NOT ALWAYS LED TO ECONOMIC GROWTH
Are tariffs good or bad for economic growth? There is now a consensus
among economists, based on extensive empirical evidence for the
late 20th century, that free trade is best. But what is true for
one time period is not necessarily true for all. The results of
a study by Kevin O'Rourke of University College Dublin, published
in the latest issue of the Economic Journal, suggest that tariffs
were in fact positively related to growth rates during the late
19th century, in sharp contrast with the experience of the late
20th century.
O'Rourke calculates the correlation between growth rates and tariffs
for ten countries between 1875 and 1913. The calculation indicates
that a 10% increase in average tariffs was associated with an increase
in annual growth rates of nearly 0.2% a year, a surprisingly large
effect in what would nowadays be thought of as the 'wrong' direction.
What explains this result? One possibility is that tariffs lowered
the relative price of investment goods, thus encouraging investment
and growth. Nowadays, tariffs lower the growth rate, in part by
making investment goods such as equipment and machinery relatively
more expensive: since they are largely traded across international
frontiers, tariffs increase their price, hence discouraging investment.
In the late 19th century, construction was a much more important
component of investment, and construction costs were largely unaffected
by tariffs. Thus, tariffs lowered the price of construction and
investment, relative to heavily-tariffed manufactured or agricultural
goods, with the result that more resources were devoted to investment.
A second possibility is that tariffs accelerated the movement of
low-productivity agricultural workers into higher-productivity manufacturing
jobs. If this was the mechanism by which tariffs raised growth rates,
then the reason for the contrasting contemporary results becomes
clear: at least in OECD economies, there are no longer large reservoirs
of low-productivity agricultural workers who can be deployed to
more productive work.
O'Rourke suggests that we should be cautious in extrapolating the
lessons of one period to other periods: the underlying processes
driving economic growth may vary across time.
Indeed, they may also vary across space. The countries included
in this study were all rich by the standards of their day: Australia,
Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Sweden, the UK
and the US. It may be that these were atypical countries, in the
sense that they were capable of developing successful manufacturing
industries behind trade barriers. Less developed countries might
not have been able to emulate their example, even if they had started
during the late 19th century, rather than in the aftermath of the
Great Depression.
Nonetheless, the results of the research make it more difficult
to argue that free trade has always been the right growth strategy
for all countries.
Note for Editors: 'Tariffs and Growth in the Late 19th Century'
by Kevin O'Rourke is published in the April 2000 issue of the Economic
Journal. Dr O'Rourke is at University College Dublin.
For Further Information: contact Kevin O'Rourke on 00-353-1-706-8509
(email: kevin.orourke@ucd.ie); RES Media Consultant Romesh Vaitilingam
on 0117-983-9770 or 0468-661095 (email: romesh@compuserve.com);
or RES Media Assistant Niall Flynn on 020-7878-2919 (email: nflynn@cepr.org).
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