Difference between revisions of "Tariff" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Economics]]
 
[[Category:Economics]]
  
==Definitions==
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A '''tariff''' or '''customs duty''' is a tax levied upon goods as they cross national boundaries, usually by the government of the importing country. The words tariff, duty, and customs are generally used interchangeably.  
A '''tariff''' is a tax on foreign goods upon importation. When a ship arrives in port a customs officer inspects the contents and charges a tax according to the tariff formula. Since the goods cannot be landed until the tax is paid it is the easiest tax to collect, and the cost of collection is small. Smugglers of course seek to evade the tariff.
 
Tariffs may be of various kinds:
 
* An "''ad valorem'' tariff" is a percentage of the value of the item, say 10 cents on the dollar
 
* A "''specific'' tariff" does not relate to the value of the imported goods but to its weight, volume, surface, etc. The specific duty stipulates how many units of currency are to be levied per unit of quantity (e.g. US$2 per kg).
 
and have various intended purpose:
 
* A "''revenue'' tariff" is a set of rates designed primarily to raise money for the government. A tariff on coffee imports, for example (imposed by countries where coffee cannot be grown) raises a steady flow of revenue.
 
* A "''protective'' tariff" is intended to artificially inflate prices of imports and "protect" domestic industries from foreign competition (see also [[effective rate of protection]]). For example, a 50% tax on an imported machine that raises the price from $100 to $150. Without a tariff the local manufacturers could only charge $100 for the same machine; now they can charge $149 and make the sale.
 
* A "''prohibitive'' tariff" is one so high that no one imports any of that item.
 
The distinction between protective and revenue tariffs is subtle: protective tariffs in addition to protecting local producers also raise revenue; revenue tariffs produce revenue but they also offer some protection to local heroes.
 
  
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==Reasons for Tariffs ==
  
An '''import tariff''' or '''import duty''' is a schedule of [[tax|duties]] imposed by a [[country]] on imported goods.
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Tariffs may be levied either:
It is paid at a border or port of entry to the relevant government to allow a good to pass into that government's territory. In medieval and ancient times, such tariffs were even collected by local governments. Now this is very rare. Typically they are collected by national governments or, in a [[customs union]], by the regional authority.
 
  
The [[tariff]] can be levied on a percentage of the value of the import, or the amount of the import (amount per unit of import). Tariffs are traditionally designed to raise revenue for the government, however they can also be for;
 
  
* Reducing the level of imports by making them more expensive relative to domestic substitutes (this lowers a [[balance of trade]] deficit).
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*to raise revenue or
* To counter the practice of [[dumping]] by raising the import price of the dumped good to market level.
 
* To retaliate against trade barriers imposed by another country, a [[trade war]].
 
* To protect key industries such as agriculture, such as the [[European Union]] has done with its [[Common Agricultural Policy]].
 
* To protect a new industry until it is sufficiently well established to compete on the international market.
 
  
In the [[United States]] and other countries, import tariffs are controversial, and the [[World Trade Organization]] has attempted to minimize them. In the [[United Kingdom]], import tariffs were abolished by [[Harold Macmillan]]'s [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]] government in 1959, a method which arguably did much to increase American cultural influence in the UK.
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*to protect domestic industries.  
  
  
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However, a tariff designed primarily to raise revenue may exercise a strong protective influence and a tariff levied primarily for protection may yield revenue. Therefore [[Gottfried Haberler]] in his “Theory of International Trade” ( Haberler, 1936 ) suggested that the best objective distinction between revenue duties and protective duties (disregarding the motives of the legislators) is to be found in their discriminatory effects as between domestic and foreign producers.
  
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===Discriminatory Effects of Tariffs===
  
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If domestically produced goods bear the same taxation as similar imported goods, or if the goods subject to duty are not produced at home, even after the duty has been levied, and if there can be no home-produced substitutes toward which demand is diverted because of the tariff, the duty is not protective.
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A '''purely protective tariff''' tends to shift production away from the export industries into the protected domestic industries and those industries producing substitutes for which demand is increased.
  
  
[[Tax, tariff and trade]] rules in modern times are usually set together because of their common impact on [[industrial policy]], [[investment policy]], and [[agricultural policy]]. A [[trade bloc]] is a group of allied countries agreeing to minimize or eliminate tariffs against trade with each other, and possibly to impose protective tariffs on imports from outside the bloc. A [[customs union]] has a common external tariff, and, according to an agreed formula, the participating countries share the revenues from tariffs on goods entering the customs union.
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On the other hand, a '''purely revenue tariff''' will not cause resources to be invested in industries producing the taxed goods or close substitutes for such goods, but it will divert resources from the production of export goods to the production of those goods and services upon which the additional government receipts are spent.
  
If a country's major industries lose to foreign competition, the loss of jobs and tax revenue can severely impair parts of that country's economy. Protective tariffs have been used as a measure against this possibility. However, protective tariffs have disadvantages as well. The most notable is that they increase the price of the good subject to the tariff, disadvantaging consumers of that good or manufacturers who use that good to produce something else: for example a tariff on food can increase [[poverty]], while a tariff on steel can make automobile manufacture less competitive. They can also backfire if countries whose trade is disadvantaged by the tariff impose tariffs of their own, resulting in a [[trade war]] and disadvantaging both sides.
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From the purely revenue standpoint, a country can levy an equivalent tax on domestic production, to avoid protecting it, or select a relatively small number of imported articles of general consumption and subject them to low duties so that there will be no tendency to shift resources into industries producing such taxed goods (or substitutes for them).  
  
There are two main ways of implementing a tariff:
 
* An ''ad valorem'' tariff is a fixed percentage of the value of the good that is being imported. Sometimes these are problematic as when the international price of a good falls, so does the tariff, and domestic industries become more vulnerable to competition. Conversely when the price of a good rises on the international market so does the tariff, but a country is often less interested in protection when the price is higher. They also face the problem of [[transfer pricing]] where a company declares a value for goods being traded which differs from the market price, aimed at reducing overall taxes due.
 
* A ''specific'' tariff is a tariff of a specific amount of money that does not vary with the price of the good. These tariffs may be harder to decide the amount at which to set them, and they may need to be updated due to changes in the market or inflation.
 
  
Adherents of [[supply-side economics]] sometimes refer to domestic taxes, such as income taxes, as being a "tariff" affecting inter-household trade.
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For instance, during the period when it was on a free-trade basis, Great Britain followed the latter practice, levying low duties on a few commodities of general consumption such as tea, sugar, tobacco, and coffee. Unintentional protection was not a major issue, because Britain could not have produced these goods domestically.
  
== Economic analysis ==
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If, on the other hand, a country wishes to protect its home industries its list of protected commodities will be long and the tariff rates high.
  
Some [[economics|economic]] theories hold that tariffs are a harmful interference with the individual [[Freedom (philosophy)|freedom]] and the laws of the [[free market]].  They believe that it is unfair toward consumers and generally disadvantageous for a country to artificially maintain an inefficient industry, and that it is better to allow it to collapse and to allow a new one to develop in its place.  The opposition to all tariffs is part of the [[free trade]] principle; the [[World Trade Organization]] aims to reduce tariffs and to avoid countries discriminating between other countries when applying tariffs.
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==Another classification of tariffs==
[[Image:Surplus_with_tariff-v2.svg|350px|right]]
 
In the following graph we see the effect that an import tariff has on the domestic economy.  In a closed economy without trade we would see [[Economic equilibrium|equilibrium]] at the intersection of the demand and supply curves (point '''B'''), yielding prices of $70 and an output of '''Y*'''.  In this case the [[consumer surplus]] would be equal to the area inside points '''A, B''' and '''K''', while [[producer surplus]] is given as the area '''A, B''' and '''L'''.  When incorporating free international trade into the model we introduce a new supply curve denoted as '''S<sub>W</sub>'''.  This curve makes the assumption that the international supply of the good or service is [[elasticity (economics)|perfectly elastic]] and that the world can produce at a near infinite quantity at the given price.  Obviously, in real world conditions this is somewhat unrealistic, but making such assumptions is unlikely to have a material impact on the outcome of the model.  In this case the international price of the good is $50 ($20 less than the domestic equilibrium price). 
 
  
As a result of this price differential we see that domestic consumers will import these cheaper international alternatives, while decreasing consumption of domestic made produce.  This reduction in domestic production is equal to '''Y*''' minus '''Y1''', thus reducing producer surplus from the area '''A, B''' and '''L''' to '''F, G''' and '''L'''.  This shows that domestic producers are unambiguously worse off with the introduction of international trade.  On the other hand we see that consumers are now paying a lower price for the goods, which increases the consumer surplus from the area '''A, B''' and '''K''' to a new surplus of '''F, J''' and '''K'''.  From this increase in consumer surplus we see that some of this surplus was, in fact, redistributed from producer surplus, equal to the area '''A, B, F''' and '''G'''.  However, the net societal gains from trade, in terms of net surplus, are equal to the area '''B, G''' and '''J'''.  The level of consumption has increased from '''Y*''' to '''Y2''', while imports are now equal to '''Y2''' minus '''Y1'''.
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Tariffs may be further classified into three groups—transit duties, export duties, and import duties.
  
Let’s say we now introduce a tariff of $10/unit on imports.  This has the effect of shifting the world supply curve vertically by $10 to '''S<sub>W</sub> + Tariff'''.  Again, this will create a redistribution of surplus within the model.  We see that consumer surplus will decrease to the area '''C, E''' and '''K''', which is a net loss of the area '''C, E, F''' and '''J'''.  This now makes consumers unambiguously worse off than under a [[free trade]] regime, but still better off than under a system without trade.  Producer surplus has increased, as they are now receiving an extra $10 per sale, to the area '''C, D''' and '''L'''.  This is a net gain of the area '''C, D, F''' and '''G'''.  With this increase in price the level of domestic production has increased from '''Y1''' to '''Y3''', while the level of imports has reduced to '''Y4''' minus '''Y3'''.
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===Transit Duties ( Tariffs )===
  
The government also receives an increase in revenues as a result of the tariff equal to the area '''D, E, H''' and '''I'''.  In dollar terms this figure is essentially $10*(Y4-Y3).  However, with this redistribution of surplus we do see that some of the redistributed consumer surplus is lost.  This loss of surplus is known as a [[deadweight loss]], and is essentially the loss to society from the introduction of the tariffThis area is equal to the area '''E, I''' and '''J'''. The area '''D, G''' and '''H''' is a transfer from consumers to those the producers must pay to bring their product to market.
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This type of duty is levied on commodities that originate in one country, cross another, and are consigned to a third. As the name implies, transit duties are levied by the country through which the goods pass.
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Such duties are no longer important instruments of commercial policy, but, during the mercantilist period (17th and 18th centuries) and even up to the middle of the 19th century in some countries, they played a role in directing trade and controlling certain of its routes. The development of the German Zollverein (customs union) in the first half of the 19th century was partly the result of Prussia's exercise of its power to levy transit duties.
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The most direct and immediate effect of transit duties is to reduce the amount of commodities traded internationally and raise their cost to the importing country. In 1921 the [[Barcelona Statute on Freedom of Transit]] abolished all transit duties.
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===Export Duties ( Tariffs )===
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Export duties are no longer used to a great extent, except to tax certain mineral and agricultural products. Several resource-rich countries depend upon export duties for much of their revenue.
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Export duties were common in the past, however, and were significant elements of mercantilist trade policies.
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Their main function was to safeguard domestic supplies rather than to raise revenue. Export duties were first introduced in England by a statute of 1275 that imposed them on hides and wool. By the middle of the 17th century the list of commodities subject to export duties had increased to include more than 200 articles.
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With the growth of free trade in the 19th century, export duties became less appealing; they were abolished in England in 1842, in France in 1857, and in Prussia in 1865. At the beginning of the 20th century only a few countries levied export duties: for example, Spain still levied them on coke and textile waste; Bolivia and Malaya on tin; Italy on objects of art; and Romania on hides and forest products.
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The neo-mercantilist revival in the 1920s and 1930s brought about a limited reappearance of export duties. In the United States, export duties were prohibited by the Constitution, mainly because of pressure from the South, which wanted no restriction on its freedom to export agricultural products.
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Export duties are now generally levied by raw-material-producing countries rather than by advanced industrial countries. Differential exchange rates are sometimes used to extract revenues from export sectors. Commonly taxed exports include coffee, rubber, palm oil, and various mineral products. The state-controlled '''pricing policies of international cartels such as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have some of the characteristics of export duties'''.
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Export duties may act as a form of protection to domestic industries. As examples, Norwegian and Swedish duties on exports of forest products were levied chiefly to encourage milling, woodworking, and paper manufacturing at home. Similarly, duties on the export from India of untanned hides after World War I were levied to stimulate the Indian tanning industry. In a number of cases, however, duties levied on exports from colonies were designed to protect the industries of the mother country and not those of the colony.
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If the country imposing the export duty supplies only a small share of the world's exports and if competitive conditions prevail, the burden of an export duty will likely be borne by the domestic producer, who will receive the world price minus the duty and other charges.
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But if the country produces a significant fraction of the world output and if domestic supply is sensitive to lower net prices, then output will fall and world prices may rise and as a consequence not only domestic producers but also foreign consumers will bear the export tax. How far a country can employ export duties to exploit its monopoly position in supplying certain raw materials depends upon the success other countries have in discovering substitutes or new sources of supply.
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===Import Duties ( Tariffs )===
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Import duties are the most important and most common types of custom duties. As noted above, they may be levied either for revenue or protection or both, but '''import tariffs are not a satisfactory means of raising revenue''', because they encourage uneconomic domestic production of the dutied item. Even if imports constitute the bulk of the available revenue base, it is better to tax all consumption, rather than only consumption of imports, in order to avoid uneconomical protection.
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Import tariffs are no longer an important source of revenues in developed countries. In the United States, for example, revenues from import duties in 1808 amounted to twice the total of government expenditures, while in 1837 they were less than one-third of such expenditures. Until near the end of the 19th century the customs receipts of the U.S. government made up about half of all its receipts. This share had fallen to about 6 percent of all receipts before the outbreak of World War II and it has since further decreased.
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An import  tariff may be either:
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*specific,
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*ad valorem, or
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*compound ( i. e. a combination of both.)
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A “specific  tariff ” is a levy of a given amount of money per unit of the import, such as $1.00 per yard or per pound.
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An “ad valorem tariff ”, on the other hand, is calculated as a percentage of the value of the import. Ad valorem rates furnish a constant degree of protection at all levels of price ( if prices change at the same rate at home and abroad), while the real burden of specific rates varies inversely with changes in the prices of the imports.
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A specific tariff, however, penalizes more severely the lower grades of an imported commodity. This difficulty can be partly avoided by an elaborate and detailed classification of imports on the basis of the stage of finishing, but such a procedure makes for extremely long and complicated tariff schedules. Specific tariffs are easier to administer than ad valorem rates, for the latter often raise difficult administrative issues with respect to the valuation of imported articles.
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====Arguments for Import Tariff  Protection====
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There are many arguments forwarded by advocates of protectionism:
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*Cheap labor: Less developed countries have a natural cost advantage as labor costs in those economies are low. They can produce goods less expensively than developed economies and their goods are more competitive in international markets.
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*Infant industries: Protectionists argue that infant, or new, industries must be protected to give them time to grow and become strong enough to compete internationally, especially industries that may provide a firm foundation for future growth, e.g. computers and telecommunications. However, critics point out that some of these infant industries never "grow up."
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*National security concerns: Any industry crucial to national security, such as producers of military hardware, should be protected. That way the nation will not have to depend on outside suppliers during political or military crises.
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*Diversification of the economy: If a country channels all its resources into a few industries, no matter how internationally competitive those industries are, it runs the risk of becoming too dependent on them. Keeping weaker industries competitive through protection may help in diversifying the nation’s economy.
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To make the above text a bit more palatable  we shall produce a simple graph ---of  an Import  Tariffs levied on a specific good in a specific country---from which we shall try to derive the economic effect  on the domestic economy of that country.
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==== Analysis of Import Tariffs Effect on a Domestic Economy ====
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[[Image:Surplus_with_tariff-v2.svg|350px|right]]
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In the following graph we see the effect that an import tariff has on the domestic economy.  In a closed economy without trade we would see [[Economic equilibrium|equilibrium]] at the intersection of the demand and supply curves (point '''B'''), yielding prices of $70 and an output of '''Y*'''. 
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In this case the [[consumer surplus]] would be equal to the area inside points '''A, B''' and '''K''', while [[producer surplus]] is given as the area '''A, B''' and '''L'''.  When incorporating free international trade into the model we introduce a new supply curve denoted as '''S<sub>W</sub>'''.   
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Under the somewhat simplistic, yet for the example permissible, assumptions --- i. e. perfect elasticity of supply of the good  and boundless quantity of world production --- we assume the international price of the good is $50 ( i. e. $20 less than the domestic equilibrium price).   
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As a result of this price differential we see that domestic consumers will import these cheaper international alternatives, while decreasing consumption of domestic made produce.  This reduction in domestic production is equal to '''Y*''' minus '''Y1''', thus reducing producer surplus from the area '''A, B''' and '''L''' to '''F, G''' and '''L'''.  This shows that domestic producers are clearly worse off with the introduction of international trade. 
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On the other hand, we see that consumers are now paying a lower price for the goods, which increases the consumer surplus from the area '''A, B''' and '''K''' to a new surplus of '''F, J''' and '''K'''From this increase in consumer surplus we see that some of this surplus was, in fact, redistributed from producer surplus, equal to the area '''A, B, F''' and '''G'''.
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However, the net societal gains from trade, in terms of net surplus, are equal to the area '''B, G''' and '''J'''.  The level of consumption has increased from '''Y*''' to '''Y2''', while imports are now equal to '''Y2''' minus '''Y1'''.
  
The model above is only completely accurate in the extreme case where none of the consumers belong to
 
the producers group and the cost of the product is a fraction of their wages. If instead, we take the
 
opposite extreme, and assume all consumers come from the producers  group, and also assume
 
their only purchasing power comes from the wages  earned in production and the product costs
 
their whole wage, then the graph looks radically different.  Without tariffs, only those
 
producers/consumers  able to produce the product at the world price will have the money to purchase
 
it at that price. The small FGL triangle will be matched by an equally small mirror image triangle of consumers still able to buy. With tariffs, a larger CDL triangle and its mirror will survive.
 
  
Note also, that with or without tariffs, there is no incentive to buy the imported goods over the domestic,
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Let’s now introduce a tariff of $10/unit on imports.  This has the effect of shifting the world supply curve vertically by $10 to '''S<sub>W</sub> + Tariff'''Again, this will create a redistribution of surplus within the model.
as the price of each is the sameOnly by altering available purchasing power through debt, selling off assets, or new wages from new forms of domestic production, will the imported goods be purchased. Or,
 
of course, if its price were only a fraction of wages.
 
  
In the real world, as more imports replace domestic goods, they consume a larger fraction of available domestic wages, moving the graph towards this view of the model. If new forms of production are not
 
found in time, the nation will go bankrupt, and internal political pressures will lead to debt default, extreme tariffs, or worse.
 
  
Moderate tariffs would slow down this process, allowing more time for new forms of production to be developed.  
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We see that consumer surplus will decrease to the area '''C, E''' and '''K''', which is a net loss of the area '''C, E, F''' and '''J'''.  This now makes consumers unambiguously worse off than under a [[free trade]] regime, but still better off than under a system without trade.  Producer surplus has increased, as they are now receiving an extra $10 per sale, to the area '''C, D''' and '''L'''.  This is a net gain of the area '''C, D, F''' and '''G'''. With this increase in price the level of domestic production has increased from '''Y1''' to '''Y3''', while the level of imports has reduced to '''Y4''' minus '''Y3'''.
  
=== Infant industry argument ===
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The government also receives an increase in revenues as a result of the tariff equal to the area '''D, E, H''' and '''I'''.  In dollar terms this figure is essentially $10*(Y4-Y3).  However, with this redistribution of surplus we do see that some of the redistributed consumer surplus is lost.  This loss of surplus is known as a [[deadweight loss]], and is essentially the loss to society from the introduction of the tariff.  This area is equal to the area '''E, I''' and '''J'''. The area '''D, G''' and '''H''' is a transfer from consumers to those the producers must pay to bring their product to market.
  
Some proponents of [[protectionism]] claim that imposing tariffs that help protect newly founded infant industries allows those domestic industries to grow and become self sufficient within the international economy once they reach a reasonable size.
 
  
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Without tariffs, only those producers/consumers  able to produce the product at the world price will have the money to purchase  it at that price. The small FGL triangle will be matched by an equally small mirror image triangle of consumers still able to buy. With tariffs, a larger CDL triangle and its mirror will survive.
  
The '''infant industry argument''' is an [[economic]] reason for [[protectionism]]. The crux of the argument is that nascent industries often do not have the [[economies of scale]] that their older competitors from other countries may have, and thus need to be protected until they can attain similar economies of scale.
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===Tariff Schedule===
  
==== Reasons for protectionism ====
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A list of all import duties is usually known as a tariff schedule:
  
  
Among theoretical academic economists, the infant industry argument is often derided, whereas applied economists and economic historians are generally more sympathetic to this viewpoint.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
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*A single tariff  schedule, a country, such as the United States, applies to all imports regardless of the country of origin. This is to say that a single duty is listed in the column opposite the enumerated commodities.  
  
==== Reasons against protectionism ====
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*A double-columned or multi-columned tariff schedule provides for different rates according to the country of origin, lower rates being granted to commodities coming from countries with which tariff agreements have been negotiated. Most trade agreements are based on the most-favored-nation clause (MFN), which extends to all nations’ party to the agreement whatever concessions are granted to the MFN.
Infant industries are by definition those that are not strong enough to survive open competition &mdash; they are dependent on government largesse and protectionism in order to survive.  At a given point in time, protectionist policy, along with inefficient industries leads to higher prices and lower quality goods for the consumer than if the good or service produced by the industry was produced on the international market.  
 
  
For these reasons the infant industry argument is often criticized. Firstly it is hard for government to know which industries will ultimately turn out to have growth potential. A lack of domestic capacity or unforeseen emergence of (even more superior) foreign rivals may, in fact, prohibit industries from becoming competitive in the long run. It is often the case that rather than developing or innovating, the protected industry becomes complacent, due to a lack of competition from the international market.
 
  
Since countries that put up barriers to imports will often face retaliatory barriers to exports, protectionism could hurt certain infant industries because the size of their potential market would be smaller.
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Every country has a free list that includes articles admitted without duty. By looking at the free list and the value of the goods imported into the United States under it one might be led to conclude that tariff protection is very limited, for more than half of all imports are exempt from duties. Such a conclusion, however, is not correct, for it ignores the fact that the higher the tariff, the less will be the quantity of dutiable imports.  
  
==== Infant industry argument in popular culture ====
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Attempts to measure the height of a tariff wall and make international comparisons of the degree of protection, based upon the ratio of tariff receipts to the total value of imports, are beset by difficulties and have little meaning.
A [[Thomas Nast]] cartoon was showing the Democrats wanting to do away with protective tariffs. Nast appeared to make his cartoon against protectionism. A "Democrat donkey" is seen looking furiously at a rolled-up bill, which is dressed in a head covering and made to look like a [[nanny]]. The "nanny bill" is seen holding a full grown man marked with "infant industries," and exclaims to the donkey "Brute! Would you strike me with the child in my arms?" The point of this cartoon, particularly with an adult male marked "infant industries," was that the "infancy" of these industries has matured to a point where they no longer require protection.  
 
  
  
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A better method of measuring the height of a tariff wall is to convert all duties into ad valorem figures and then estimate the weighted-average rate. The weight should reflect the relative importance of the different imports; a tariff on foodstuffs, for example, may be far more important than a tariff on luxuries consumed by a small group of people.
  
===Revenue argument===
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A more appropriate measure of protection is that of effective protection. It recognizes that the protection afforded a particular domestic industry depends on the treatment of its productive inputs, as well as its outputs. Suppose, for example, that half of the inputs to an industry are imported and subject to a duty of 100 percent. If the imports with which the industry competes are subject to a duty of less than 50 percent there is no effective protection.
  
Critics of free trade have argued that tariffs are especially important to developing countries as a source of revenue. Developing nations do not have the institutional capacity to effectively levy income and sales taxes. In comparison with other forms of taxation, tariffs are relatively easy to collect.  The trend of lifting tariffs and promoting free trade has been argued to have had disproportionately negative effects on the governments of developing nations who have greater difficulty than developed nations in replacing tariffs as a revenue source.<ref>[http://www.hillnews.com/thehill/export/TheHill/Comment/OpEd/121405_oped2.html]</ref>
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==Brief history of tariffs in the United States ==
  
== History of tariffs in the United States ==
 
 
There are two sides to the history of [[tariff]]s in the [[economic history of the United States]] and the role they have played in [[U.S. trade policy]].  In the first place, it was the single most important source of federal revenue from the 1790s to the eve of World War I, when it was finally surpassed by income taxes. So essential was this revenue source, and so easy was it to collect at the major ports, that all sides agreed that the nation should have a tariff for revenue purposes.  In practice, that was an average tax of about 20% of the value of some imported goods. (Imports that were not taxed were "free".)  
 
There are two sides to the history of [[tariff]]s in the [[economic history of the United States]] and the role they have played in [[U.S. trade policy]].  In the first place, it was the single most important source of federal revenue from the 1790s to the eve of World War I, when it was finally surpassed by income taxes. So essential was this revenue source, and so easy was it to collect at the major ports, that all sides agreed that the nation should have a tariff for revenue purposes.  In practice, that was an average tax of about 20% of the value of some imported goods. (Imports that were not taxed were "free".)  
  
The second issue was protection to industry; it was the political dimension of the tariff. From the 1790s to the 2000s, the tariff (and closely related issues such as import quotas and trade treaties) have generated enormous political stresses. For a brief moment in 1832 South Carolina made vague threats to leave the Union over the tariff issue. In the 1850s the southerners controlled tariff policy, keeping it low (thus it was not a reason for secession).
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The second issue was protection to industry; it was the political dimension of the tariff. From the 1790s to the 2000s, the tariff (and closely related issues such as import quotas and trade treaties) have generated enormous political stresses. For a brief moment in 1832 South Carolina made vague threats to leave the Union over the tariff issue. But since,  in the 1850s the southerners controlled tariff policy, keeping it low, and thus it was not a reason enough for secession.
  
===1789 to 1828===
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===1790 till after World War II===
The [[Tariff Act of 1789]] imposed the first national source of revenue for the newly formed United States. The new Constitution allowed only the federal government to levy tariffs, so the old system of state rates disappeared. The new law taxed all imports at rates from 5 to 15 percent. These modest rates were primarily designed to generate revenue to pay the national debt and annual expenses of the federal government. In his [[Report on Manufactures]] Treasury Secretary [[Alexander Hamilton]] proposed a far-reaching scheme to use protective tariffs as a lever for rapid industrialization. His proposals were not adopted.
 
  
The high protectionism Hamilton called for was not adopted until after the War of 1812 when nationalists like [[Henry Clay]] and [[John C. Calhoun]] wanted more industry so the nation would have a balanced economy. In wartime, they declared, having a home industry was a necessity. Likewise owners of the small new factories that were springing up in the northeast to produce boots, hats, candles, nails and other common items failed to obtain higher tariffs that would significantly protect them from more efficient British producers.  A 10% discount on the tax was offered on items imported in American ships, so that the American merchant marine would be supported.
+
However, starting from the [[Tariff Act of 1789]], imposing the first national source of revenue for the newly formed United States and taxing all imports at rates from 5 – to 15 percent, the tariffs had gone on the political roller-coaster, depending on the political party at helm.
  
Once industrialization started, the demand for higher and higher tariffs came from manufacturers and factory workers. They believed that Americans should be protected from the low wages of Europe. Every Congressman was eager to logroll a higher rate for his local industry.  Senator [[Daniel Webster]], formerly a spokesperson for Boston's merchants who imported goods (and wanted low tariffs), switched dramatically to represent the manufacturing interests in the [[Tariff of 1824]]. Rates were especially high for bolts of cloth and for bar iron, of which Britain was a low-cost producer.  The culmination came in the [[Tariff of 1828]], ridiculed by free traders as the "Tariff of Abominations," with duties averaging over 50 percent.  Intense political reaction came from South Carolinians, who concluded that they would pay more for imports and sell less cotton abroad, so their economic interest was being unfairly injured.  They attempted to "nullify" the federal tariff and spoke of secession (see the [[Nullification Crisis]]). The compromise that ended the crisis included a lowering of the tariff over ten years to a uniform 20% in 1842.
+
Consequently, the [[Tariff of 1828]], ridiculed by free traders as the "Tariff of Abominations," with duties averaging over 50 percent gave way to [[Nullification Crisis]] and to a uniform 20 % in 1842.
  
===Tariff 1828-60===
+
It stayed roughly at the same level until the Republican-controlled Congress doubled and tripled the rates on European goods ( during the Civil War ) , which topped out at 49 percent in 1868.  
[[Henry Clay]] and his [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig Party]], envisioning a rapid modernization based on highly productive factories, sought a high tariff. Their key argument was that startup factories, or "infant industries," would at first be less efficient than European (British) producers.  Furthermore, American factory workers would be paid higher wages than their European competitors.  The arguments proved highly persuasive in industrial districts. Clay's position was adopted in the 1828 and 1832 Tariff Acts.
 
  
The Nullification Crisis forced an abandonment of the Whig position of higher tariffs over ten years until 1842. When the Whigs won victories in the 1840 and 1842 elections, taking control of Congress, they re-instituted higher tariffs with the [[Tariff of 1842]].
+
With Democrats, especially presidential candidates had always trying for lower taxes, the Republican position could have been defined by Republican Congressman [[William McKinley]], who argued:
 +
"…..Free foreign trade gives our money, our manufactures, and our markets to other nations to the injury of our labor, our tradespeople, and our farmers. Protection keeps money, markets, and manufactures at home for the benefit of our own people….."Hence, in 1897, the GOP  boosted rates back to the 50 percent level.
  
The Democrats won in 1844, electing [[James K. Polk]] as president. Polk succeeded in passing the [[Walker tariff]] of 1846 by uniting the rural and agricultural factions of the country for lower taxes. They sought minimal levels of a "tariff for revenue only" that would pay the cost of government but not show favoritism to one section or economic sector at the expense of another. The Walker Tariff remained in place until 1857, when a nonpartisan coalition lowered them again with the [[Tariff of 1857]] to 18 percentThe United States thus had a low-tariff policy that favored the South until the Civil War began in 1861.
+
True to the political scheme, Woodrow Wilson made a drastic lowering of tariff rates a major priority for his presidency. The 1913 [[Underwood Tariff]] cut rates, but the coming of world war in 1914 radically revised trade patterns. Reduced trade and, especially, the new reveues generated by the federal [[income tax]] made tariffs much less important. ( NOTE: In fact, ever since, the U.S. tariffs have been comparatively much lower than in the last half of the 19th century. )
  
===Civil War Protective Policy, 1861-1913===
+
[[Franklin Roosevelt]] and the New Dealers made promises about lowering tariffs on a reciprocal country-by-country basis (which they did), hoping this would expand foreign trade (which it did not.)  Frustrated, they gave much more attention to domestic remedies for the depression; by 1936 the tariff issue had faded from politics, and the revenue it raised was smallIn [[World War II]] both tariffs and reciprocity were insignificant compared to trade channeled through Lend Lease.  
The [[Panic of 1857]] was blamed by many former Whigs and industrialists on the free trade policy of the 1857 law. Legislators such as [[Justin Morrill]] and economist [[Henry Carey]] began to push for a restoration of the Whig [[American System (economic plan)|American System]] program of protective tariffs. War was at hand and the Union urgently needed revenues. With the Southern senators gone, Congress passed the Morrill Tariff in early 1861; it took effect a few days before the war began, and was not collected in the SouthThe [[Confederate States of America]] passed its own tariff of 15% on most items, including all items that previously were duty-free from the North.
 
  
As the [[American Civil War]] became a major conflict Washington needed vast revenues. The Morrill Tariff was revised upward twice more between 1861 and 1862.  With the low-tariff southerners gone, the Republican-controlled Congress doubled and tripled the rates on European goods, which topped out at 49 percent in 1868. The U.S. never put a tariff on goods from the Confederacy because the U.S.A. never recognized the legal existence of the C.S.A. Throughout the Civil War the southern states were under a blockade by the northern states. Very little trade that was legal occurred between either side because most goods were considered war contraband. Thus the Confederacy collected a mere $3.5 million in tariff revenue from the start to end and had to resort to inflation and confiscation instead.
+
===Post World War II===
  
After the war, high tariffs remained.  Advocates insisted that tariffs brought prosperity to the nation as a whole and no one was really injured. As industrialization proceeded apace throughout the Northeast, some Democrats, especially Pennsylvanians, became high tariff advocates. The Republican high tariff advocates appealed to farmers with the theme that high-wage factory workers would pay premium prices for foodstuffs.  This was the "home market" idea, and it won over most farmers in the Northeast, but it had little relevance to the southern and western farmers who exported most of their cotton, tobacco and wheat. In the late 1860s the wool manufacturers (based near Boston and Philadelphia) formed the first national lobby, and cut deals with wool-growing farmers in several states. Their challenge was that fastidious wool producers in Britain and Australia marketed a higher quality fleece than the careless Americans, and that British manufacturers had costs as low as the American mills.  The result was a wool tariff that helped the farmers by a high rate on imported wool&mdash;a tariff the American manufacturers had to pay&mdash;together with a high tariff on finished woolens and worsted goods. Apart from wool and woolens, American industry and agriculture&mdash;and industrial workers&mdash;had become the most efficient in the world by the 1880s. They were not at risk from cheap imports. No other country had the industrial capacity, the high efficiency and low costs, or the complex distribution system needed to compete in the vast American market. Indeed, it was the British who watched in stunned horror as cheaper American products flooded their home islandsWailed the ''London Daily Mail'' in 1900,
+
After the war the [[U.S.]] promoted the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade ([[GATT]]) established in 1947, to minimize tariffs and other restrictions, and to liberalize trade among all capitalist countriesIn 1995 GATT became the World Trade Organization [[WTO]]; with the collapse of Communism its open markets/low tariff ideology became dominant worldwide in the 1990s.
<blockquote>
 
"We have lost to the American manufacturer electrical machinery,
 
locomotives, steel rails, sugar-producing and agricultural machinery, and latterly even stationary engines, the pride and backbone of the British engineering industry."
 
</blockquote>
 
Nevertheless American manufacturers and workers demanded the high tariff be maintained. The tariff represented a complex balance of forces.  Railroads, for example, consumed vast quantities of steel.  To the extent tariffs raised steel prices, they felt injured. The Republicans became masters of negotiating exceedingly complex arrangements so that inside each of their congressional districts there were more satisfied "winners" than disgruntled "losers."  The tariff after 1880 was an ideological relic with no economic rationale&mdash;it was a timebomb waiting to explode&mdash;and it repeatedly did explode.
 
  
Democratic president [[Grover Cleveland]] redefined the issue in 1887, with his stunning attack on the tariff as inherently corrupt, opposed to true republicanism, and inefficient to boot: "When we consider that the theory of our institutions guarantees to every citizen the full enjoyment of all the fruits of his industry and enterprise... it is plain that the exaction of more than [minimal taxes] is indefensible extortion and a culpable betrayal of American fairness and justice." The election of 1888 was fought primarily over the tariff issue, and Cleveland lost.  Republican Congressman [[William McKinley]] argued,
+
After 1970s, for the first time there was stiff competition from low-cost producers around the globe. In the late 1970s [[Detroit]] and the auto workers union combined to fight for protection. They obtained not high tariffs, but a voluntary restriction of imports from the [[Japan|Japanese]] government.  
<blockquote>
 
"Free foreign trade gives our money, our manufactures, and our markets to other nations to the injury of our labor, our tradespeople, and our farmers. Protection keeps money, markets, and manufactures at home for the benefit of our own people.
 
</blockquote>
 
Democrats campaigned energetically against the high McKinley tariff of 1890, and scored sweeping gains that year; they restored Cleveland to the White House in 1892. The severe depression that started in 1893 destroyed the Democratic party.  Cleveland and the [[Bourbon Democrats]] insisted on a much lower tariff.  His problem was that Democratic electoral successes had brought in Democratic congressmen from industrial districts who were willing to raise rates to benefit their districts.  The [[Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act]] of 1894 did lower overall rates from 50 percent to 42 percent, but contained so many concessions to protectionism that Cleveland refused to sign it.  McKinley campaigned heavily in 1896 on the tariff as a positive solution to depression. Promising protection and prosperity to every economic sector, he won a smashing victory. The Republicans rushed through the [[Dingley Act|Dingley tariff]] in 1897, boosting rates back to the 50 percent level. Democrats responded that the high rates created "trusts" (monopolies) and led to higher consumer prices. McKinley won reelection by an even bigger landslide and started talking about a post-tariff era of reciprocal trade agreements. Reciprocity went nowhere; McKinley's vision was a half century too early.
 
  
The delicate balance flew apart on president [[William Howard Taft]]'s watch. Taft campaigned in 1908 for tariff "reform," which everyone assumed meant lower rates. The House lowered rates with the Payne Bill, then sent it to the Senate where [[Nelson Wilmarth Aldrich]] worked his sleight of hand. Whereas Aldrich was a New England businessman and a master of the complexities of the tariff, the Midwestern Republican insurgents were rhetoricians and lawyers who distrusted the special interests and assumed the tariff was sheer robbery for the benefit of fat cats at the expense of the ordinary consumer. Rural America believed that its superior morality deserved special protection, while the dastardly immorality of the trusts&mdash;and cities generally&mdash;merited financial punishment. Aldrich baited them. Did the insurgents want lower tariffs? His wickedly clever [[Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act]] of 1909 lowered the protection on Midwestern farm products, while raising rates favorable to his Northeast.
+
Quotas were two-country diplomatic agreements that had the same protective effect as high tariffs, but did not invite retaliation from third countries. The Japanese producers, limited by the number of cars they could export to America, opted to increase the value of their exports to maintain revenue growth. This action threatened the American producers' historical hold on the mid- and large-size car markets.
  
===Tariff with Canada===
+
===1980s to present===
The [[Canadian-American Reciprocity Treaty]] increased trade between 1855 and its ending in 1866.  When it ended Canada turned to tariffs. The [[National Policy]] was a Canadian economic program introduced by [[John A. Macdonald]]'s Conservative Party in 1879 after it returned to power. It had been an official policy, however, since 1876. It was based on high tariffs to protect Canada's manufacturing industry.  Macdonald campaigned on the policy in the 1878 election, and handily beat the Liberal Party, which supported free trade.
+
The GOP under [[Ronald Reagan]] and [[George H.W. Bush]] abandoned the protectionist ideology, and came out against quotas and in favor of the GATT/WTO policy of minimal economic barriers to global trade. Free trade with Canada came about as a result of the [[Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement]] of 1987, which led in 1994 to the North American Free Trade Agreement, [[NAFTA]].  
Efforts to restore free trade with Canada collapsed when Canada rejected a proposed reciprocity treaty in fear of American imperialism in the [[Canadian federal election, 1911]].  Taft negotiated a reciprocity agreement with Canada, that had the effect of sharply lowering tariffs. Democrats supported the plan but Midwestern Republicans bitterly opposed it. Barnstorming the country for his agreement, Taft undiplomatically pointed to the inevitable integration of the North American economy, and suggested that Canada should come to a "parting of the ways" with Britain. Canada's Conservative Party now had an issue to regain power from the low-tariff Liberals; after a surge of pro-imperial anti-Americanism, the Conservatives won. Ottawa rejected reciprocity, reasserted the [[National Policy]] and went to London first for new financial and trade deals.  The Payne Aldrich Tariff of 1909 actually changed little and had slight economic impact one way or the other, but the political impact was enormous. The insurgents felt tricked and defeated and swore vengeance against Wall Street and its minions Taft and Aldrich. The insurgency led to a fatal split down the middle in 1912 as the GOP lost its balance wheel.
 
[[Image:Iowa-ohio.JPG|thumb|350px|President Teddy Roosevelt watches GOP team pull apart on tariff issue]]
 
  
==== Low tariff policy, 1913 to present ====
+
In 2000s, [[President of the United States|US President]] [[Bill Clinton]] worked with Republicans to give [[China]] entry into WTO and "most favored nation" trading status (''i.e.,'' low tariffs). Opposition to [[liberal|liberalized]] trade came increasingly from labor unions, but their shrinking size and diminished political clout repeatedly left them on the losing side.
Woodrow Wilson made a drastic lowering of tariff rates a major priority for his presidency. The 1913 [[Underwood Tariff]] cut rates, but the coming of world war in 1914 radically revised trade patterns. Reduced trade and, especially, the new reveues generated by the federal [[income tax]] made tariffs much less important.  When the Republicans regained power after the war they restored the usual high rates.  The [[Great Depression]] was worldwide, and international trade shrank drastically. The crisis baffled the GOP, and it unwisely tried its magic one last time in the [[Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act]] of 1930. This time it backfired, as [[Canada]], [[UK|Britain]], [[Germany]], [[France]] and other industrial countries retaliated with their own tariffs and special, bilateral trade deals. American imports and exports both went into a tailspin.  [[Franklin Roosevelt]] and the New Dealers made promises about lowering tariffs on a reciprocal country-by-country basis (which they did), hoping this would expand foreign trade (which it did not.)  Frustrated, they gave much more attention to domestic remedies for the depression; by 1936 the tariff issue had faded from politics, and the revenue it raised was small.  In [[World War II]] both tariffs and reciprocity were insignificant compared to trade channeled through Lend Lease.  
 
====Post World War II====
 
  
After the war the [[U.S.]] promoted the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade ([[GATT]]) established in 1947, to minimize tariffs and other restrictions, and to liberalize trade among all capitalist countriesIn 1995 GATT became the World Trade Organization [[WTO]]; with the collapse of Communism its open markets/low tariff ideology became dominant worldwide in the 1990s.
+
===WTO and Developing World===
 +
NAFTA and WTO advocates promoted an optimistic vision of the future, with prosperity to be based on intellectuals skills and managerial know-how more than on routine hand labor.   
  
American industry and labor prospered after World War II, but hard times set in after 1970. For the first time there was stiff competition from low-cost producers around the globe. Many rust belt industries faded or collapsed, especially the manufacture of [[steel]], TV sets, shoes, toys, textiles and clothing. [[Toyota]] and [[Nissan]] threatened the giant domestic auto industry. In the late 1970s [[Detroit]] and the auto workers union combined to fight for protection. They obtained not high tariffs, but a voluntary restriction of imports from the [[Japan|Japanese]] government. Quotas were two-country diplomatic agreements that had the same protective effect as high tariffs, but did not invite retaliation from third countries. By limiting the number of Japanese automobiles that could be imported, quotas inadvertently helped Japanese companies push into larger, and more expensive market segments. The Japanese producers, limited by the number of cars they could export to America, opted to increase the value of their exports to maintain revenue growth. This action threatened the American producers' historical hold on the mid- and large-size car markets.
+
However, much more serious tariff problems and oppositions to free international trade have been experienced in the developing and/or transitional countries with infant industries, without tariff protection, may not survive the competition with cheap import. There is also  very cheap labour force --- apart from unemployment and outright poverty --- producing low-priced products that these countries try to “dump” on to international market.
====1980s to present====
 
The GOP under [[Ronald Reagan]] and [[George H.W. Bush]] abandoned the protectionist ideology, and came out against quotas and in favor of the GATT/WTO policy of minimal economic barriers to global trade. Free trade with Canada came about as a result of the [[Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement]] of 1987, which led in 1994 to the North American Free Trade Agreement, [[NAFTA]]. It was based on George H. W. Bush's plan to enlarge the scope of the market for American firms to include [[Canada]] and [[Mexico]].  [[President of the United States|US President]] [[Bill Clinton]], with strong Republican support, pushed NAFTA through Congress over the vehement objection of labor unions. Likewise in 2000 he worked with Republicans to give [[China]] entry into WTO and "most favored nation" trading status (''i.e.,'' low tariffs).  NAFTA and WTO advocates promoted an optimistic vision of the future, with prosperity to be based on intellectuals skills and managerial know-how more than on routine hand labor.  They promised that free trade meant lower prices for consumers.  It also meant lower wages and fewer jobs in older industries that could no longer compete.  Opposition to [[liberal|liberalized]] trade came increasingly from labor unions, but their shrinking size and diminished political clout repeatedly left them on the losing side.
 
  
 +
Particularly agriculture is of critical importance to many developing countries in terms of gross domestic product (GDP) and employment, and thus plays a key role in meeting development
 +
objectives such as poverty alleviation and food security. Negotiations on agriculture began already in 2000 under the “built-in agenda” of the Uruguay Round, with the long-term objective of establishing a fair and market-oriented trading system through a programme of fundamental reform encompassing strengthened rules and specific commitments on support and protection in order to correct and prevent restrictions and distortions in world agricultural markets.
  
 +
The negotiations are aimed at substantial improvements in  market access; reductions of, with a view to phasing out, all forms of export subsidies; and substantial reductions in trade-distorting domestic support. There is to be special and differential treatment for developing countries in negotiations and eventual concessions  and commitments, and as appropriate in the rules and disciplines to be negotiated, so as to be operationally effective and to enable developing countries to effectively take account of  their development needs, including food security and rural development.
 +
In the WAT language, the said “special and differential treatment” consists of  delineating the permitted level of domestic support to agriculture in any specific developing country into  “boxes” of different colours:
 +
*Green box: supports considered not to distort trade and, therefore, permitted with no limits.
 +
*Blue box: permitted supports linked to production, but subject to production limits, and therefore minimally trade-distorting.
 +
*Amber box: supports considered to distort trade and therefore subject to reduction commitments, i.e., prohibited.
  
== References ==
+
==References==
* Altshuler, Alan A. and Daniel Roos. ''The Future of the Automobile : The Report of MIT's International Automobile Program''. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press (1984)
+
*“Back to Basics: Market Access Issues in the Doha agenda”, United Nations, New York and Geneva, 2003
 +
*"international trade." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
 +
<http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=61697>
 
* Doran, Charles F. and Gregory P. Marchildon. ''The NAFTA Puzzle: Political Parties and Trade in North America'' (1994)
 
* Doran, Charles F. and Gregory P. Marchildon. ''The NAFTA Puzzle: Political Parties and Trade in North America'' (1994)
* Eckes, Alfred. ''Opening America's Market: U.S. Foreign Trade Policy since 1776'' (1995)
+
*Eckes, Alfred. ''Opening America's Market: U.S. Foreign Trade Policy since 1776'' (1995)
* Kaplan, Edward S.; ''Prelude to Trade Wars: American Tariff Policy, 1890-1922'' Greenwood Press 1994
+
*Haberler, G., The Theory of  International Trade, London, 1936, (German ed. 1933)
* Kaplan, Edward S. ''American Trade Policy: 1923-1995'' (1996), [http://www.eh.net/bookreviews/library/0038.shtml online review]
+
*Kaplan, Edward S.; ''Prelude to Trade Wars: American Tariff Policy, 1890-1922'' Greenwood Press 1994
* Mark A. Smith; ''The Tariff on Wool'' 1926
+
*Kaplan, Edward S. ''American Trade Policy: 1923-1995'' (1996), [http://www.eh.net/bookreviews/library/0038.shtml online review]
* Schattsneider, E. E. ''Politics, Pressures and the Tariff'' (1935). Passage of Hawley-Smoot tariff
+
 
* Stanwood, Edward. ''American Tariff Controversies in the nineteenth century.'' (1903), political narrative
 
* [[Ida M. Tarbell]]; ''The Tariff in Our Times'' 1911
 
* [http://www.econlib.org/library/Taussig/tsgSTQtoc.html Taussig, F. W. ''Some Aspects of the Tariff Question: An Examination of the Development of American Industries Under Protection'' (1931)]
 
* [http://www.mises.org/etexts/taussig.pdf Taussig, F. W. ''The Tariff History of the United States''. 8th edition (1931); 5th edition 1910 is online]
 
* [http://www.econlib.org/library/Taussig/tsgEnc1.html Taussig, F.W. "Tariff," ''Encyclopedia Britannica'' (11th edition, 1911) vol 26]
 
* Taylor, George Rogers, ed. ''The Great Tariff Debate, 1820-1830'' (1953), excerpts from primary and secondary sources
 
* Terrill, Tom E. ''The Tariff, Politics, and American Foreign Policy 1874-1901'' (1973).
 
* Festus P. Summers; ''William L. Wilson and Tariff Reform, a Biography'' 1953
 
* ''Tariffs and Trade in U.S. History: An Encyclopedia'' (2003) Edited by Elaine C. Prange Turney and Cynthia Clark Northrup.
 
* Wolman, Paul. ''Most Favored Nation: The Republican Revisionists and U.S. Tariff Policy, 1897-1912'' (1992)
 
  
* Dominick Salvatore, ''Introduction to International Economics'' (2004)
 
* [http://www.econlib.org/library/Taussig/tsgEnc1.html Taussig, F.W. "Tariff," ''Encyclopedia Britannica'' (11th edition, 1911) vol 26 pp. 422-27.]
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Revision as of 14:59, 5 September 2007


A tariff or customs duty is a tax levied upon goods as they cross national boundaries, usually by the government of the importing country. The words tariff, duty, and customs are generally used interchangeably.

Reasons for Tariffs

Tariffs may be levied either:


  • to raise revenue or
  • to protect domestic industries.


However, a tariff designed primarily to raise revenue may exercise a strong protective influence and a tariff levied primarily for protection may yield revenue. Therefore Gottfried Haberler in his “Theory of International Trade” ( Haberler, 1936 ) suggested that the best objective distinction between revenue duties and protective duties (disregarding the motives of the legislators) is to be found in their discriminatory effects as between domestic and foreign producers.

Discriminatory Effects of Tariffs

If domestically produced goods bear the same taxation as similar imported goods, or if the goods subject to duty are not produced at home, even after the duty has been levied, and if there can be no home-produced substitutes toward which demand is diverted because of the tariff, the duty is not protective.

A purely protective tariff tends to shift production away from the export industries into the protected domestic industries and those industries producing substitutes for which demand is increased.


On the other hand, a purely revenue tariff will not cause resources to be invested in industries producing the taxed goods or close substitutes for such goods, but it will divert resources from the production of export goods to the production of those goods and services upon which the additional government receipts are spent.

From the purely revenue standpoint, a country can levy an equivalent tax on domestic production, to avoid protecting it, or select a relatively small number of imported articles of general consumption and subject them to low duties so that there will be no tendency to shift resources into industries producing such taxed goods (or substitutes for them).


For instance, during the period when it was on a free-trade basis, Great Britain followed the latter practice, levying low duties on a few commodities of general consumption such as tea, sugar, tobacco, and coffee. Unintentional protection was not a major issue, because Britain could not have produced these goods domestically.


If, on the other hand, a country wishes to protect its home industries its list of protected commodities will be long and the tariff rates high.

Another classification of tariffs

Tariffs may be further classified into three groups—transit duties, export duties, and import duties.

Transit Duties ( Tariffs )

This type of duty is levied on commodities that originate in one country, cross another, and are consigned to a third. As the name implies, transit duties are levied by the country through which the goods pass.

Such duties are no longer important instruments of commercial policy, but, during the mercantilist period (17th and 18th centuries) and even up to the middle of the 19th century in some countries, they played a role in directing trade and controlling certain of its routes. The development of the German Zollverein (customs union) in the first half of the 19th century was partly the result of Prussia's exercise of its power to levy transit duties.

The most direct and immediate effect of transit duties is to reduce the amount of commodities traded internationally and raise their cost to the importing country. In 1921 the Barcelona Statute on Freedom of Transit abolished all transit duties.

Export Duties ( Tariffs )

Export duties are no longer used to a great extent, except to tax certain mineral and agricultural products. Several resource-rich countries depend upon export duties for much of their revenue.

Export duties were common in the past, however, and were significant elements of mercantilist trade policies.

Their main function was to safeguard domestic supplies rather than to raise revenue. Export duties were first introduced in England by a statute of 1275 that imposed them on hides and wool. By the middle of the 17th century the list of commodities subject to export duties had increased to include more than 200 articles.


With the growth of free trade in the 19th century, export duties became less appealing; they were abolished in England in 1842, in France in 1857, and in Prussia in 1865. At the beginning of the 20th century only a few countries levied export duties: for example, Spain still levied them on coke and textile waste; Bolivia and Malaya on tin; Italy on objects of art; and Romania on hides and forest products.

The neo-mercantilist revival in the 1920s and 1930s brought about a limited reappearance of export duties. In the United States, export duties were prohibited by the Constitution, mainly because of pressure from the South, which wanted no restriction on its freedom to export agricultural products.


Export duties are now generally levied by raw-material-producing countries rather than by advanced industrial countries. Differential exchange rates are sometimes used to extract revenues from export sectors. Commonly taxed exports include coffee, rubber, palm oil, and various mineral products. The state-controlled pricing policies of international cartels such as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have some of the characteristics of export duties.


Export duties may act as a form of protection to domestic industries. As examples, Norwegian and Swedish duties on exports of forest products were levied chiefly to encourage milling, woodworking, and paper manufacturing at home. Similarly, duties on the export from India of untanned hides after World War I were levied to stimulate the Indian tanning industry. In a number of cases, however, duties levied on exports from colonies were designed to protect the industries of the mother country and not those of the colony.


If the country imposing the export duty supplies only a small share of the world's exports and if competitive conditions prevail, the burden of an export duty will likely be borne by the domestic producer, who will receive the world price minus the duty and other charges.

But if the country produces a significant fraction of the world output and if domestic supply is sensitive to lower net prices, then output will fall and world prices may rise and as a consequence not only domestic producers but also foreign consumers will bear the export tax. How far a country can employ export duties to exploit its monopoly position in supplying certain raw materials depends upon the success other countries have in discovering substitutes or new sources of supply.

Import Duties ( Tariffs )

Import duties are the most important and most common types of custom duties. As noted above, they may be levied either for revenue or protection or both, but import tariffs are not a satisfactory means of raising revenue, because they encourage uneconomic domestic production of the dutied item. Even if imports constitute the bulk of the available revenue base, it is better to tax all consumption, rather than only consumption of imports, in order to avoid uneconomical protection.


Import tariffs are no longer an important source of revenues in developed countries. In the United States, for example, revenues from import duties in 1808 amounted to twice the total of government expenditures, while in 1837 they were less than one-third of such expenditures. Until near the end of the 19th century the customs receipts of the U.S. government made up about half of all its receipts. This share had fallen to about 6 percent of all receipts before the outbreak of World War II and it has since further decreased.


An import tariff may be either:


  • specific,
  • ad valorem, or
  • compound ( i. e. a combination of both.)


A “specific tariff ” is a levy of a given amount of money per unit of the import, such as $1.00 per yard or per pound.

An “ad valorem tariff ”, on the other hand, is calculated as a percentage of the value of the import. Ad valorem rates furnish a constant degree of protection at all levels of price ( if prices change at the same rate at home and abroad), while the real burden of specific rates varies inversely with changes in the prices of the imports.

A specific tariff, however, penalizes more severely the lower grades of an imported commodity. This difficulty can be partly avoided by an elaborate and detailed classification of imports on the basis of the stage of finishing, but such a procedure makes for extremely long and complicated tariff schedules. Specific tariffs are easier to administer than ad valorem rates, for the latter often raise difficult administrative issues with respect to the valuation of imported articles.

Arguments for Import Tariff Protection

There are many arguments forwarded by advocates of protectionism:

  • Cheap labor: Less developed countries have a natural cost advantage as labor costs in those economies are low. They can produce goods less expensively than developed economies and their goods are more competitive in international markets.


  • Infant industries: Protectionists argue that infant, or new, industries must be protected to give them time to grow and become strong enough to compete internationally, especially industries that may provide a firm foundation for future growth, e.g. computers and telecommunications. However, critics point out that some of these infant industries never "grow up."


  • National security concerns: Any industry crucial to national security, such as producers of military hardware, should be protected. That way the nation will not have to depend on outside suppliers during political or military crises.


  • Diversification of the economy: If a country channels all its resources into a few industries, no matter how internationally competitive those industries are, it runs the risk of becoming too dependent on them. Keeping weaker industries competitive through protection may help in diversifying the nation’s economy.


To make the above text a bit more palatable we shall produce a simple graph ---of an Import Tariffs levied on a specific good in a specific country---from which we shall try to derive the economic effect on the domestic economy of that country.

Analysis of Import Tariffs Effect on a Domestic Economy

In the following graph we see the effect that an import tariff has on the domestic economy. In a closed economy without trade we would see equilibrium at the intersection of the demand and supply curves (point B), yielding prices of $70 and an output of Y*.


In this case the consumer surplus would be equal to the area inside points A, B and K, while producer surplus is given as the area A, B and L. When incorporating free international trade into the model we introduce a new supply curve denoted as SW.


Under the somewhat simplistic, yet for the example permissible, assumptions --- i. e. perfect elasticity of supply of the good and boundless quantity of world production --- we assume the international price of the good is $50 ( i. e. $20 less than the domestic equilibrium price).

As a result of this price differential we see that domestic consumers will import these cheaper international alternatives, while decreasing consumption of domestic made produce. This reduction in domestic production is equal to Y* minus Y1, thus reducing producer surplus from the area A, B and L to F, G and L. This shows that domestic producers are clearly worse off with the introduction of international trade.


On the other hand, we see that consumers are now paying a lower price for the goods, which increases the consumer surplus from the area A, B and K to a new surplus of F, J and K. From this increase in consumer surplus we see that some of this surplus was, in fact, redistributed from producer surplus, equal to the area A, B, F and G.

However, the net societal gains from trade, in terms of net surplus, are equal to the area B, G and J. The level of consumption has increased from Y* to Y2, while imports are now equal to Y2 minus Y1.


Let’s now introduce a tariff of $10/unit on imports. This has the effect of shifting the world supply curve vertically by $10 to SW + Tariff. Again, this will create a redistribution of surplus within the model.


We see that consumer surplus will decrease to the area C, E and K, which is a net loss of the area C, E, F and J. This now makes consumers unambiguously worse off than under a free trade regime, but still better off than under a system without trade. Producer surplus has increased, as they are now receiving an extra $10 per sale, to the area C, D and L. This is a net gain of the area C, D, F and G. With this increase in price the level of domestic production has increased from Y1 to Y3, while the level of imports has reduced to Y4 minus Y3.

The government also receives an increase in revenues as a result of the tariff equal to the area D, E, H and I. In dollar terms this figure is essentially $10*(Y4-Y3). However, with this redistribution of surplus we do see that some of the redistributed consumer surplus is lost. This loss of surplus is known as a deadweight loss, and is essentially the loss to society from the introduction of the tariff. This area is equal to the area E, I and J. The area D, G and H is a transfer from consumers to those the producers must pay to bring their product to market.


Without tariffs, only those producers/consumers able to produce the product at the world price will have the money to purchase it at that price. The small FGL triangle will be matched by an equally small mirror image triangle of consumers still able to buy. With tariffs, a larger CDL triangle and its mirror will survive.

Tariff Schedule

A list of all import duties is usually known as a tariff schedule:


  • A single tariff schedule, a country, such as the United States, applies to all imports regardless of the country of origin. This is to say that a single duty is listed in the column opposite the enumerated commodities.
  • A double-columned or multi-columned tariff schedule provides for different rates according to the country of origin, lower rates being granted to commodities coming from countries with which tariff agreements have been negotiated. Most trade agreements are based on the most-favored-nation clause (MFN), which extends to all nations’ party to the agreement whatever concessions are granted to the MFN.


Every country has a free list that includes articles admitted without duty. By looking at the free list and the value of the goods imported into the United States under it one might be led to conclude that tariff protection is very limited, for more than half of all imports are exempt from duties. Such a conclusion, however, is not correct, for it ignores the fact that the higher the tariff, the less will be the quantity of dutiable imports.

Attempts to measure the height of a tariff wall and make international comparisons of the degree of protection, based upon the ratio of tariff receipts to the total value of imports, are beset by difficulties and have little meaning.


A better method of measuring the height of a tariff wall is to convert all duties into ad valorem figures and then estimate the weighted-average rate. The weight should reflect the relative importance of the different imports; a tariff on foodstuffs, for example, may be far more important than a tariff on luxuries consumed by a small group of people.

A more appropriate measure of protection is that of effective protection. It recognizes that the protection afforded a particular domestic industry depends on the treatment of its productive inputs, as well as its outputs. Suppose, for example, that half of the inputs to an industry are imported and subject to a duty of 100 percent. If the imports with which the industry competes are subject to a duty of less than 50 percent there is no effective protection.

Brief history of tariffs in the United States

There are two sides to the history of tariffs in the economic history of the United States and the role they have played in U.S. trade policy. In the first place, it was the single most important source of federal revenue from the 1790s to the eve of World War I, when it was finally surpassed by income taxes. So essential was this revenue source, and so easy was it to collect at the major ports, that all sides agreed that the nation should have a tariff for revenue purposes. In practice, that was an average tax of about 20% of the value of some imported goods. (Imports that were not taxed were "free".)

The second issue was protection to industry; it was the political dimension of the tariff. From the 1790s to the 2000s, the tariff (and closely related issues such as import quotas and trade treaties) have generated enormous political stresses. For a brief moment in 1832 South Carolina made vague threats to leave the Union over the tariff issue. But since, in the 1850s the southerners controlled tariff policy, keeping it low, and thus it was not a reason enough for secession.

1790 till after World War II

However, starting from the Tariff Act of 1789, imposing the first national source of revenue for the newly formed United States and taxing all imports at rates from 5 – to 15 percent, the tariffs had gone on the political roller-coaster, depending on the political party at helm.

Consequently, the Tariff of 1828, ridiculed by free traders as the "Tariff of Abominations," with duties averaging over 50 percent gave way to Nullification Crisis and to a uniform 20 % in 1842.

It stayed roughly at the same level until the Republican-controlled Congress doubled and tripled the rates on European goods ( during the Civil War ) , which topped out at 49 percent in 1868.

With Democrats, especially presidential candidates had always trying for lower taxes, the Republican position could have been defined by Republican Congressman William McKinley, who argued: "…..Free foreign trade gives our money, our manufactures, and our markets to other nations to the injury of our labor, our tradespeople, and our farmers. Protection keeps money, markets, and manufactures at home for the benefit of our own people….."Hence, in 1897, the GOP boosted rates back to the 50 percent level.

True to the political scheme, Woodrow Wilson made a drastic lowering of tariff rates a major priority for his presidency. The 1913 Underwood Tariff cut rates, but the coming of world war in 1914 radically revised trade patterns. Reduced trade and, especially, the new reveues generated by the federal income tax made tariffs much less important. ( NOTE: In fact, ever since, the U.S. tariffs have been comparatively much lower than in the last half of the 19th century. )

Franklin Roosevelt and the New Dealers made promises about lowering tariffs on a reciprocal country-by-country basis (which they did), hoping this would expand foreign trade (which it did not.) Frustrated, they gave much more attention to domestic remedies for the depression; by 1936 the tariff issue had faded from politics, and the revenue it raised was small. In World War II both tariffs and reciprocity were insignificant compared to trade channeled through Lend Lease.

Post World War II

After the war the U.S. promoted the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) established in 1947, to minimize tariffs and other restrictions, and to liberalize trade among all capitalist countries. In 1995 GATT became the World Trade Organization WTO; with the collapse of Communism its open markets/low tariff ideology became dominant worldwide in the 1990s.

After 1970s, for the first time there was stiff competition from low-cost producers around the globe. In the late 1970s Detroit and the auto workers union combined to fight for protection. They obtained not high tariffs, but a voluntary restriction of imports from the Japanese government.

Quotas were two-country diplomatic agreements that had the same protective effect as high tariffs, but did not invite retaliation from third countries. The Japanese producers, limited by the number of cars they could export to America, opted to increase the value of their exports to maintain revenue growth. This action threatened the American producers' historical hold on the mid- and large-size car markets.

1980s to present

The GOP under Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush abandoned the protectionist ideology, and came out against quotas and in favor of the GATT/WTO policy of minimal economic barriers to global trade. Free trade with Canada came about as a result of the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement of 1987, which led in 1994 to the North American Free Trade Agreement, NAFTA.

In 2000s, US President Bill Clinton worked with Republicans to give China entry into WTO and "most favored nation" trading status (i.e., low tariffs). Opposition to liberalized trade came increasingly from labor unions, but their shrinking size and diminished political clout repeatedly left them on the losing side.

WTO and Developing World

NAFTA and WTO advocates promoted an optimistic vision of the future, with prosperity to be based on intellectuals skills and managerial know-how more than on routine hand labor.

However, much more serious tariff problems and oppositions to free international trade have been experienced in the developing and/or transitional countries with infant industries, without tariff protection, may not survive the competition with cheap import. There is also very cheap labour force --- apart from unemployment and outright poverty --- producing low-priced products that these countries try to “dump” on to international market.

Particularly agriculture is of critical importance to many developing countries in terms of gross domestic product (GDP) and employment, and thus plays a key role in meeting development objectives such as poverty alleviation and food security. Negotiations on agriculture began already in 2000 under the “built-in agenda” of the Uruguay Round, with the long-term objective of establishing a fair and market-oriented trading system through a programme of fundamental reform encompassing strengthened rules and specific commitments on support and protection in order to correct and prevent restrictions and distortions in world agricultural markets.

The negotiations are aimed at substantial improvements in market access; reductions of, with a view to phasing out, all forms of export subsidies; and substantial reductions in trade-distorting domestic support. There is to be special and differential treatment for developing countries in negotiations and eventual concessions and commitments, and as appropriate in the rules and disciplines to be negotiated, so as to be operationally effective and to enable developing countries to effectively take account of their development needs, including food security and rural development. In the WAT language, the said “special and differential treatment” consists of delineating the permitted level of domestic support to agriculture in any specific developing country into “boxes” of different colours:

  • Green box: supports considered not to distort trade and, therefore, permitted with no limits.
  • Blue box: permitted supports linked to production, but subject to production limits, and therefore minimally trade-distorting.
  • Amber box: supports considered to distort trade and therefore subject to reduction commitments, i.e., prohibited.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • “Back to Basics: Market Access Issues in the Doha agenda”, United Nations, New York and Geneva, 2003
  • "international trade." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.

<http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=61697>

  • Doran, Charles F. and Gregory P. Marchildon. The NAFTA Puzzle: Political Parties and Trade in North America (1994)
  • Eckes, Alfred. Opening America's Market: U.S. Foreign Trade Policy since 1776 (1995)
  • Haberler, G., The Theory of International Trade, London, 1936, (German ed. 1933)
  • Kaplan, Edward S.; Prelude to Trade Wars: American Tariff Policy, 1890-1922 Greenwood Press 1994
  • Kaplan, Edward S. American Trade Policy: 1923-1995 (1996), online review


External links


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