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Encyclopedia > Effective rate of protection

The effective rate of protection is a statistic used by economists to measure the real protection yielded by import duties or tariffs. This equals (VAd/VAint) - 1, where: An economist is someone who studies Economics. ... Protectionism is the economic policy of promoting favored domestic industries through the use of high tariffs and other regulations to discourage imports. ... An import duty is a tariff paid at a border or port of entry to the relevant government to allow a good to pass into that governments territory. ... A tariff is a tax placed on imported and/or exported goods, sometimes called a customs duty. ...

VAd = domestic value added
VAint = international value added

An alternative that yields an identical answer is that the effective rate of protection equals [(Tf Ti) / VAint] − 1, where:

Tf = the total tariff theoretically or actually paid on the final product
Ti = the total tariffs paid, theoretically or actually, on the importable inputs used to make that product.

The effective rate of protection is used to estimate the protection really afforded to domestic producers at each stage of production, i.e., how much extra they can charge and still be competitive with imported goods. In this context, it does not matter whether the final product or the inputs used to made it were actually imported or not. What is important is that they are importable. If so, the implied tariffs should be included in the above formulas because, even if the item was not actually imported, the existence of the tariff should have raised its price in the local market by an equivalent value. A tariff is a tax placed on imported and/or exported goods, sometimes called a customs duty. ...


The effective rate of protection is used to estimate the protection really afforded to domestic producers at each stage of production, i.e., how much extra they can charge and still be competitive with imported goods. If the total value of the tariffs on importable inputs exceeds that on the output, the effective rate of protection is negative, i.e., the industry is discriminated against in comparison with the imported product.


The effective rate of protection reveals the extremely adverse effect of tariffs that escalate from low rates on raw materials to high rates on intermediate inputs and yet higher rates on the final product as, in fact, most countries' tariff schedules do. Less developed countries complain that such tariff schedules gravely impede their access to developed countries' markets.


  Results from FactBites:
 
International Economics Glossary: E (4329 words)
Protection that is explained as the outcome of economic and/or political forces.
Rationing of foreign exchange, typically used when the exchange rate is fixed and the central bank is unable or unwilling to enforce the rate by exchange-market intervention.
The process by which a country's exchange rate comes to be what it is. With a floating exchange rate, this may be modeled in various ways, including the elasticities approach, the monetary approach, the portfolio approach, and the asset approach.
Effective rate of protection - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (318 words)
The effective rate of protection is a statistic used by economists to measure the real protection yielded by import duties or tariffs.
The effective rate of protection is used to estimate the protection really afforded to domestic producers at each stage of production, i.e., how much extra they can charge and still be competitive with imported goods.
The effective rate of protection reveals the extremely adverse effect of tariffs that escalate from low rates on raw materials to high rates on intermediate inputs and yet higher rates on the final product as, in fact, most countries' tariff schedules do.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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