Many countries use duty drawbacks on exports, yet there is no consensus whether countries should embrace or abandon them. The answer depends on countries' development priorities and economic conditions. An increase in the drawback has a positive impact on export competitiveness, but the welfare effect is ambiguous. A welfare increase is more likely if the economy is small with high input tariffs, low initial drawback, low administrative costs and tariff leakages. In China duty drawback removal after meeting its WTO commitments improves welfare, but hurts economic efficiency, export competitiveness, and real incomes. Further liberalization can mitigate these negative effects. © 2007 The Canadian Economics Association.
CITATION STYLE
Ianchovichina, E. (2007). Are duty drawbacks on exports worth the hassle? Canadian Journal of Economics, 40(3), 881–913. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.00435.x
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