3.1.7
Arguments Against Protectionism
Arguments Against Protectionism
Arguments Against Protectionism
Protectionism can have some indirect negative consequences on different workers and industries.


Higher prices and less choice
Higher prices and less choice
- Domestic consumers may have to pay more for goods in the protected industry. They have less to spend in other industries, which could lead to job losses.
- So these low-wage workers pay higher prices for basic necessities and, as such, their money can buy fewer goods.
- In the US, textile and apparel protectionism adds to the costs of imports. So consumers end up paying billions of dollars more for clothing each year.
- Consumers also have less choice over what to consume.


Higher input costs
Higher input costs
- If the protected product is an input, it will raise the costs of production of the industry that uses the input. This makes domestic firms less competitive if they are hoping to export.
- This could also give rise to cost-push inflation.


Risk of retaliation
Risk of retaliation
- Countries often retaliate against tariffs and this can reduce a country's exports.
- Exports are a component of aggregate demand (AD), so AD could fall.


X-inefficiency
X-inefficiency
- Protectionism could lead to long term dependency on protection. This is because protectionism breeds inefficiencies because firms are protected from foreign competition.
- E.g. 60% of EU budget is spent on subsidising agriculture through the Common Agricultural Policy, although agriculture is worth less than 15% of EU GDP.
Government Control of Globalisation - Protectionism
Government Control of Globalisation - Protectionism
Using trade protectionism and adding tariffs to imports from other countries makes their goods look more expensive and so limits trade with these countries. This limits the spread of globalisation.


Banana wars
Banana wars
- A well-known example of protectionism was the ‘banana wars’ of the early 2000s.
- The EU had a trade deal with the Caribbean which set a quota of how many bananas each country could sell to Europe. The idea was that this would help these countries to develop without needing aid.
- But this was an act of protectionism because it stopped the free trade of bananas and made bananas from outside of the Caribbean look more expensive.
- The US complained to the World Trade Organisation that this was limiting global trade and stopping their bananas from selling in Europe.


Infant industries
Infant industries
- Infant industries are industries that are in the early stages of development in the domestic country.
- Adding tariffs to foreign goods can help infant industries create domestic jobs and let an industry develop.
- The USA did this with lots of iron and steel industries in the late 1800s.
1Microeconomics
1.1Competitive Markets: Demand & Suply
1.2Elasticity
1.3Government Intervention
1.4Market Failure
1.4.1Types of Market Failure
1.4.2Introduction to Externalities
1.4.3Negative Externalities
1.4.4Policy for Negative Externalities
1.4.5Positive Externalities
1.4.6The Deadweight Welfare Loss of Externalities
1.4.7Case Study - The Externalities of Education
1.4.8Public Goods & the Free-Rider Problem
1.4.9Asymmetric Information
1.4.10End of Topic Test - Market Failure
1.4.11Application Questions - Market Failure
1.5HL: Theory of the Firm & Market Structures
2Macroeconomics
2.1The Level of Overall Economic Activity
2.2Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply
2.2.1The Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.2Components of Aggregate Demand
2.2.3Shape of the Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.4Shifts in Aggregate Demand
2.2.5IB Multiple Choice - Aggregate Demand
2.2.6Short & Long-Run Aggregate Supply
2.2.7Alternative Models of LRAS
2.2.8Equilibrium in the AD-AS Model
2.2.9Output Gaps & the AD-AS Model
2.3Macroeconomic Objectives
2.3.1Introduction to Unemployment
2.3.2Limitations of Unemployment
2.3.3Types of Unemployment
2.3.4Causes & Impact of Unemployment
2.3.5Defining Inflation
2.3.6Measuring Inflation
2.3.7Use of Index Numbers
2.3.8The Consumer Price Index
2.3.9Consequences of Inflation
2.3.10Causes of Inflation
2.3.11Inflation & Unemployment Tradeoff
2.3.12The Short-Run Phillips Curve
2.3.13The Long-Run Phillips Curve
2.4Economic Growth, Poverty & Inequality
2.5Fiscal Policy
2.6Monetary Policy
2.7Supply-Side Policies
3The Global Economy
3.1International Trade
3.2Exchange Rates
3.3The Balance of Payments
3.4Economic Integration
3.5Terms of Trade
3.6Economic Development
3.7The Role of Domestic & International Factors
3.8The Role of International Trade
3.9The Role of Foreign Aid
Jump to other topics
1Microeconomics
1.1Competitive Markets: Demand & Suply
1.2Elasticity
1.3Government Intervention
1.4Market Failure
1.4.1Types of Market Failure
1.4.2Introduction to Externalities
1.4.3Negative Externalities
1.4.4Policy for Negative Externalities
1.4.5Positive Externalities
1.4.6The Deadweight Welfare Loss of Externalities
1.4.7Case Study - The Externalities of Education
1.4.8Public Goods & the Free-Rider Problem
1.4.9Asymmetric Information
1.4.10End of Topic Test - Market Failure
1.4.11Application Questions - Market Failure
1.5HL: Theory of the Firm & Market Structures
2Macroeconomics
2.1The Level of Overall Economic Activity
2.2Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply
2.2.1The Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.2Components of Aggregate Demand
2.2.3Shape of the Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.4Shifts in Aggregate Demand
2.2.5IB Multiple Choice - Aggregate Demand
2.2.6Short & Long-Run Aggregate Supply
2.2.7Alternative Models of LRAS
2.2.8Equilibrium in the AD-AS Model
2.2.9Output Gaps & the AD-AS Model
2.3Macroeconomic Objectives
2.3.1Introduction to Unemployment
2.3.2Limitations of Unemployment
2.3.3Types of Unemployment
2.3.4Causes & Impact of Unemployment
2.3.5Defining Inflation
2.3.6Measuring Inflation
2.3.7Use of Index Numbers
2.3.8The Consumer Price Index
2.3.9Consequences of Inflation
2.3.10Causes of Inflation
2.3.11Inflation & Unemployment Tradeoff
2.3.12The Short-Run Phillips Curve
2.3.13The Long-Run Phillips Curve
2.4Economic Growth, Poverty & Inequality
2.5Fiscal Policy
2.6Monetary Policy
2.7Supply-Side Policies
3The Global Economy
3.1International Trade
3.2Exchange Rates
3.3The Balance of Payments
3.4Economic Integration
3.5Terms of Trade
3.6Economic Development
3.7The Role of Domestic & International Factors
3.8The Role of International Trade
3.9The Role of Foreign Aid
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