World Trade Organization: T E T A L C D M
World Trade Organization: T E T A L C D M
World Trade Organization: T E T A L C D M
Kyle Bagwell
Stanford and NBER
Robert W. Staiger
Stanford and NBER
October 8, 2009
Abstract
Existing theories of trade agreements suggest that GATT/WTO eorts to reign in export
subsidies represent an inecient victory for exporting governments that comes at the expense
of importing governments. Building from the Cournot delocation model rst introduced by
Venables (1985), we demonstrate that it is possible to develop a formal treatment of export
subsidies in trade agreements in which a more benign interpretation of eorts to restrain export
subsidies emerges. And we suggest that the gradual tightening of restraints on export subsidies
that has occurred in the GATT/WTO may be interpreted as deriving naturally from the gradual
reduction in import barriers that member countries have negotiated. Together with existing
theories, the Cournot delocation model may help to provide a more nuanced and complete
understanding of the treatment of export subsidies in trade agreements.
We thank Michele Ruta, Assaf Zimring and lecture participants at the WTO for very useful comments.
1 Introduction
The treatment of export subsidies in trade agreements is puzzling. It is often observed that export
subsidies distort market forces and lead to inecient patterns of trade, and that the use of export
subsidies should be restricted by international agreement for this reason. Formalizing this position,
however, has proven to be surprisingly elusive. In fact, formal arguments for the treatment of export
subsidies in trade agreements point to a starkly dierent conclusion: rather than restrain export
subsidies, international agreements should, if anything, encourage them.
1
At a basic level, this
conclusion reects the trade-volume-expanding nature of export subsidies, which generally aligns
these policies with the purpose of a trade agreement.
In practice, the treatment of export subsidies is also complex, and has evolved over time from
the early years of the General Agreement on Taris and Trade (GATT) to the creation of GATTs
successor, the World Trade Organization (WTO).
2
In the early GATT era, a permissive stance was
taken on export subsidies, amounting to little more than reporting requirements. Over time GATT
restrictions on the use of export subsidies were progressively tightened, and during the nal GATT
negotiation round (the Uruguay Round) in which the WTO was created, a more comprehensive
approach to subsidies was introduced in the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
(the SCM Agreement) which includes a prohibition on the use of export subsidies.
3
Theoretical attempts to understand and interpret the treatment of export subsidies in trade
agreements face two challenges. A rst challenge is to nd situations in which a government actually
would be tempted to use an export subsidy. A second challenge is to show that a ceiling on export
subsidies would then be benecial for the negotiating governments. The rst step has been taken
in the distinct literatures on strategic trade policy and on the political economy of trade policy.
The second step is especially perplexing. To be sure, for the models developed in these literatures,
the governments of exporting countries could enjoy mutual gains from an agreement to impose
ceilings on export subsidies. But once importing-country welfare is considered, mutual gains for
the negotiating governments would require that exporting countries face oors on export subsidies.
4
Therefore, the existing theories imply a provocative interpretation of GATT/WTO eorts to reign
in export subsidies: these eorts represent an inecient victory for exporting governments that
comes at the expense of importing governments.
In this paper, we demonstrate that it is possible to develop a formal treatment of export
subsidies in trade agreements in which a more benign interpretation of the GATT/WTO eorts
to reign in export subsidies emerges. And we suggest that the gradual tightening of restraints on
export subsidies that has occurred in the GATT/WTO may be interpreted as deriving naturally
from the gradual reduction in import barriers that member countries have negotiated. To make
1
See, for example, the discussion in Bagwell and Staiger (2002, Ch. 10).
2
See Sykes (2005) on the evolution of subsidy rules in the GATT/WTO.
3
The WTOs Agreement on Agriculture provides further elaboration of the rules on subsidies as they apply to
agricultural goods.
4
This is true in the seminal strategic export subsidy model of Brander and Spencer (1985), and it is also true
when export subsidies reect political economy motives (see Bagwell and Staiger, 2001).
1
these points, we adopt the Cournot delocation model rst introduced by Venables (1985). Venables
shows that, if countries start at global free trade (i.e., at a set of policies such that each country
sets its import and export policy at free trade), then a country gains by introducing a small export
subsidy and its trading partner loses. Assuming that countries start at global free trade, Venables
also shows that a country gains, and its trading partner again loses, when the country imposes
a small import tari. Venables does not characterize the Nash equilibrium in import and export
policies, though, and so does not address the rst step mentioned above, namely, conrming that a
government actually would use an export subsidy. As well, he does not consider eciency, and so
does not assess the second step mentioned above, namely, conrming that negotiated restraints on
export subsidies could lead to mutual gains for the negotiating governments. We focus on a linear
model and address both steps.
More specically, we consider trade policies and agreements in the linear Cournot delocation
model. In this model, two countries trade a given homogeneous good subject to trade costs. The
markets are segmented and rms compete as Cournot competitors, leading to the possibility of
two-way trade in identical products. This model exhibits a rm-delocation eect, whereby a higher
trade cost along one channel of trade increases the number of rms in the importing country and
decreases the number of rms in the exporting country. And as Venables (1985) emphasizes, by
altering the intensity of Cournot competition across markets, the rm-delocation eect can give
rise to novel reasons for unilateral trade policy intervention.
We rst oer a thorough analysis of the manner in which prices and trade volumes respond to
changes in trade costs such as a change in an import or export tax. Following Venables (1985), we
then show that, starting at global free trade, the introduction of a small import tari or export
subsidy generates a welfare gain for the intervening country and a welfare loss for its trading partner.
We also establish that an ecient set of trade policies in this model entails a net trade tax of zero
along each channel of trade; for example, countries achieve an ecient outcome under global free
trade. Viewed together, these ndings suggest a potential eciency-enhancing interpretation for
WTO rules, which place ceilings on import taris and export subsidies.
We show, however, that this interpretation is subtle. In particular, we also consider the Nash
equilibrium in trade policies, and we nd that export taxes are used in the Nash equilibrium, in
addition to import taris. Thus, if the trade policies of countries are suciently close to their
non-cooperative levels, then a ceiling on export subsidies by itself would be meaningless.
The nding that countries employ export taxes under non-cooperative interaction arises as well
in traditional models that feature perfectly competitive markets; however, it is perhaps unexpected
in the Cournot delocation model, given that the optimal export-policy departure from global free
trade involves the introduction of an export subsidy. To interpret our characterization of the Nash
equilibrium, we show that, if a countrys trade policies start at free trade, then that country could
gain by introducing a small import tari combined with a small export tax, where these policy
changes are set so as to maintain the free-trade price in the intervening country. This unilateral
variation leaves unaltered the level of consumer surplus in the intervening country while generating
2
greater tari revenue for this country. We provide further interpretation of the Nash equilibrium
by showing that, if a countrys trade policies start in the neighborhood of free trade, then a
novel tari-complementarity eect exists, whereby the countrys import and export taris exert a
complementary eect on its tari revenue.
With these results in place, we may then understand why a country is unlikely to use an export
subsidy when it is already imposing a signicant import tari. Intuitively, an import tari induces
entry by rms in the intervening country via the rm-delocation eect, which ultimately increases
exports and raises the cost of an export-subsidy program. Moreover, we may also understand
why, in the presence of a signicant import tari, an export tax begins to look appealing: by
inducing entry of rms in the intervening countrys trading partner, the rm-delocation eect that
is associated with the export tax raises the volume of imports on which the import tari is applied,
thereby enhancing the revenue benets of the import tari.
In the Nash equilibrium, therefore, an export tax is used in conjunction with an import tari.
If a tight ceiling on import taris is imposed, however, then a country may be tempted to use an
export subsidy. From this perspective, we may speculate that the imposition over time in the WTO
of tighter restrictions on the use of export subsidies may ultimately be explained by the success
that this institution has had over time in facilitating negotiations leading to tighter ceilings on
import taris by member countries. We thus provide a subtle and potentially rich interpretation
of the treatment of export subsidies in the WTO.
Finally, we return to a theme raised in a companion paper (Bagwell and Staiger, 2009) and
consider the politically optimal policies (the unilateral trade policies that would be chosen if
governments were not motivated by the terms-of-trade implications of their respective trade policy
selections) in the linear Cournot delocation model. We nd that a unique symmetric political
optimum exists and that it entails global free trade. Thus, if governments were not motivated
by the terms-of-trade implications of their trade policies, then they would achieve an ecient
outcome, and in particular each government would eliminate all taris and subsidies on imports as
well as exports. The prohibition of export subsidies contained in the WTO SCM Agreement is thus
compatible with the political optimum in this model. This feature further strengthens the ability
of the linear Cournot delocation model to provide an interpretation of the treatment of export
subsidies in the GATT/WTO, given that other design features of the GATT/WTO can also be
interpreted as guiding governments toward ecient politically optimal outcomes (see Bagwell and
Staiger, 1999a, 2009).
The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. In section 2 we develop the linear Cournot
delocation model. Section 3 then characterizes unilateral and ecient trade policies, establishing
that global free trade is ecient and that from this starting point each country would desire the
introduction of a small import tari or export subsidy. Section 4 derives the Nash equilibrium trade
policies, and establishes that the Nash policies involve import taris and export taxes. In section
5 we oer an interpretation of these trade policy ndings. Finally, section 6 establishes that the
unique symmetric politically optimal policies entail global free trade, while section 7 concludes.
3
2 Cournot Delocation Model
In this section, we develop our model. The model entails two countries that trade a given homo-
geneous good, where the markets are segmented and rms compete as Cournot competitors. We
begin by analyzing the model in a short-run setting in which the number of rms is xed in each
country. We then allow for endogenous entry and exit and thus adopt a long-run orientation.
We present short- and long-run comparative statics results. In later sections, we use this model to
analyze trade policies.
2.1 Basic Assumptions
We focus on a good that is produced and consumed in both a domestic or home country and in
a foreign country, and we use asterisks () to denote foreign-country variables.
5
The respective
markets are segmented, and so prices may dier across the two markets. The rms compete in a
Cournot fashion. As is well known, in this setting, two-way (intra-industry) trade may occur.
To keep the analysis tractable, we assume that demand and cost functions are linear. With the
domestic price denoted as 1 and the foreign price denoted as 1
(Q
) = 1 Q
, respectively, where Q
denotes the units of the good supplied to the domestic market and Q
h
be the output of each
other home rm for sales in the foreign market, and
f
be the output of each foreign rm for sales
5
As usual, the model can be interpreted in general-equilibrium terms with the addition of a freely traded second
good that enters quasi-linearly into utility.
4
in the foreign market. With these denitions in place, we may dene the short-run prot function
for home rm i as
hi
= [1(
i
h
+ (:
h
1)
h
+:
f
f
) c]
i
h
(1)
+[1
(
i
h
+ (:
h
1)
h
+:
f
f
) (c +t
)]
i
h
1.
Recall that t
0 denotes the total trade cost expressed in specic (per unit) terms for sales of
domestic rms in the foreign market.
A domestic rm chooses
i
h
and
i
h
to maximize its short-run prot. Using (1), the rst-order
conditions for prot maximization are given by
1(
i
h
+ (:
h
1)
h
+:
f
f
) c =
i
h
(2)
1
(
i
h
+ (:
h
1)
h
+:
f
f
) (c +t
) =
i
h
,
from which the short-run reaction functions for home rm i may be derived:
i
h
(
h
,
f
, :
h
, :
f
) =
1 (:
h
1)
h
:
f
f
c
2
i
h
(
h
,
f
, :
h
, :
f
, t
) =
1 (:
h
1)
h
:
f
f
(c +t
)
2
.
We may now impose within-country symmetry and set
h
=
i
h
and
h
=
i
h
. This yields the
home-rm reaction functions:
h
(
f
, :
h
, :
f
) =
1 :
f
f
c
:
h
+ 1
(3)
h
(
f
, :
h
, :
f
, t
) =
1 :
f
f
(c +t
)
:
h
+ 1
.
As expected, the reaction function for home rms in the domestic market is decreasing in the
number of units imported from abroad, :
f
f
, the number of domestic rms, :
h
, and the marginal
cost of production associated with domestic sales, c. Similarly, the reaction function for home
rms in the foreign market is decreasing in the number of units sold by foreign rms in the foreign
market, :
f
f
, the number of domestic rms, :
h
, and the marginal cost of foreign sales, c +t
.
Consider next the output choices of some foreign rm i. Let
i
f
denote the output of foreign
rm i for sales in the foreign market and
i
f
denote the output for foreign rm i for sales in the
foreign market. The short-run prot function for foreign rm i is then dened as
fi
= [1
(
i
f
+ (:
f
1)
f
+:
h
h
) c]
i
f
(4)
+[1(
i
f
(:
f
1)
f
:
h
h
) (c +t)]
i
f
1,
where recall that t 0 denotes the total trade cost expressed in specic (per unit) terms for sales
of foreign rms in the domestic market. With the rst-order conditions for prot maximization
5
given by
1
(
i
f
+ (:
f
1)
f
+:
h
h
) c =
i
f
(5)
1(
i
f
(:
f
1)
f
:
h
h
) (c +t) =
i
f
,
we proceed exactly as above to derive the short-run reaction functions for foreign rm i, and then
impose within-country symmetry by setting
f
=
i
f
and
f
=
i
f
to arrive at the foreign-rm
reaction functions:
f
(
h
, :
h
, :
f
) =
1 :
h
h
c
:
f
+ 1
(6)
f
(
h
, :
h
, :
f
, t) =
1 :
h
h
(c +t)
:
f
+ 1
As (6) reveals, the short-run comparative statics for a foreign rm also take the expected signs.
Using (3) and (6), we may now solve for the Cournot-Nash equilibrium quantities in each of the
two (segmented) markets. For the home market, we nd
N
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t) =
1 c +t:
f
1 +:
h
+:
f
(7)
N
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t) =
1 c t(1 +:
h
)
1 +:
h
+:
f
.
As expected, each home rm produces more in the domestic market when its marginal cost of
production is lower, the trade cost facing foreign rms is higher, and the number of domestic or
foreign rms is lower. Likewise, each foreign rm produces more in the domestic market when
its marginal cost of production is lower, the trade cost that it faces is lower, and the number of
domestic or foreign rms is lower. Letting the aggregate Cournot-Nash quantity in the home market
be expressed as Q
N
:
h
N
h
+:
f
N
f
, it then follows from (7) that
Q
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t) =
(:
h
+:
f
)(1 c) t:
f
1 +:
h
+:
f
(8)
1
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t) 1 Q
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t) =
1 +c:
h
+ (c +t):
f
1 +:
h
+:
f
.
The Cournot output (price) in the domestic market decreases (increases) with the trade cost, t,
and increases (decreases) with the numbers of domestic and foreign rms, :
h
and :
f
.
Likewise, for the foreign market, we nd
N
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) =
1 c +t
:
h
1 +:
h
+:
f
(9)
N
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) =
1 c t
(1 +:
f
)
1 +:
h
+:
f
.
6
Letting the aggregate Cournot-Nash quantity in the foreign market be expressed as Q
N
:
h
N
h
+
:
f
N
f
, we have from (9) that
Q
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) =
(:
h
+:
f
)(1 c) t
:
h
1 +:
h
+:
f
(10)
1
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) 1 Q
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) =
1 +c:
f
+ (c +t
):
h
1 +:
h
+:
f
.
Thus, the Cournot output (price) in the foreign market decreases (increases) with the trade cost,
t
, and increases (decreases) with the numbers of domestic and foreign rms, :
h
and :
f
.
Finally, the Cournot-Nash quantities from (7) and (9) may be plugged into the domestic-rm
prot expression found in (1) to dene the short-run maximized prot of a home rm:
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t) [1
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t) c]
N
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t)
+[1
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) (c +t
)]
N
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) 1.
Using the rst-order condition for prot maximization as represented in (2), we may simplify and
write
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t) = (
N
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t))
2
+ (
N
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
))
2
1.
Similarly, using (7), (9) and (4), we nd that the short-run maximized prot of a foreign rm is
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t) [1
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t
) c]
N
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
)
+[1
N
(:
h
, :
f
, t) (c +t)]
N
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t) 1.
Using the rst-order conditions for prot maximization as found in (5), we may again simplify and
write
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t) = (
N
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
))
2
+ (
N
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t))
2
1.
We complete our short-run analysis of the model by considering comparative statics properties
for the maximized prot functions. These properties are essential below, when we analyze the
long-run implications of changes in trade policies. For a home rm, we nd that
0
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t)
0t
= 2
N
h
0
N
h
0t
0 (11)
0
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t)
0t
= 2
N
h
0
N
h
0t
< 0,
where for notational simplicity we suppress functional dependencies on the right-hand side of these
expressions. Thus, an increase in the trade cost t that confronts foreign exporters generates an
increase in prot for a home rm, whereas an increase in the trade cost t
, t)
0:
h
= 2
N
h
0
N
h
0:
h
+ 2
N
h
0
N
h
0:
h
< 0 (12)
0
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t)
0:
f
= 2
N
h
0
N
h
0:
f
+ 2
N
h
0
N
h
0:
f
< 0.
Thus, home rm prot also falls when there is an increase in the number of domestic or foreign
rms.
Similarly, for a foreign rm, we nd that
0
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t)
0t
= 2
N
f
0
N
f
0t
< 0 (13)
0
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t)
0t
= 2
N
f
0
N
f
0t
0,
and
0
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t)
0:
f
= 2
N
f
0
N
f
0:
f
+ 2
N
f
0
N
f
0:
f
< 0 (14)
0
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t)
0:
h
= 2
N
f
0
N
f
0:
h
+ 2
N
f
0
N
f
0:
h
< 0.
These ndings may be interpreted in an analogous fashion.
2.3 Long-Run Analysis and the Firm-Delocation Eect
Thus far we have assumed that the numbers of domestic and foreign rms are xed. A short-
run modeling framework is appropriate for understanding how trade policies may shift prots
between domestic and foreign rms, and indeed much of the strategic-trade literature employs this
framework. In this paper, however, we are interested in the long-run eects of trade policy. We are
therefore led to consider the manner in which trade policies may change the numbers of domestic
and foreign rms as well as the outputs of individual rms. To this end, we now shift our focus to
the long run and use the short-run analysis above as a means of dening and analyzing the long-run
industry equilibrium.
The key feature of the long-run analysis is that the numbers of domestic and foreign rms are
endogenously determined by free-entry conditions. We thus now dene the free-entry numbers of
rms, :
N
h
(t
, t) and :
N
f
(t
h
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t) = 0 =
f
(:
h
, :
f
, t
, t). (15)
In all of our subsequent analysis, we assume that the numbers of domestic and foreign rms adjust
to ensure that the free-entry conditions captured in (15) are satised.
We can analyze :
N
h
(t
, t) and :
N
f
(t
N
h
N
h
=
t
+:
f
(t +t
)
1 +:
h
+:
f
0, and (17)
N
f
N
f
=
t +:
h
(t +t
)
1 +:
h
+:
f
0
under our assumption that t 0 and t
N
h
N
f
= t 0, and
N
f
N
h
= t
0.
As will become clear below, the local-market bias in rm sales plays a critical role in determining
the long-run implications of trade policies.
We next conduct long-run comparative statics on the numbers of domestic and foreign rms.
Using the signs for partial derivatives of maximized prot functions as derived above in (11)-(14),
along with the sign of the Jacobian as given in (16), it is direct to conrm that :
N
h
(t
, t) is
decreasing in t
, t) is increasing in t
and decreasing
in t. Thus, we observe the presence of a rm-delocation eect: a higher trade cost along one
channel increases the number of rms in the importing country and decreases the number of rms
in the exporting country.
For future use, we require explicit expressions for the rm-delocation eects associated with
changes in trade policies. In particular, we nd that a change in the trade cost that aects foreign
exports induces the following changes in the numbers of domestic and foreign rms:
0:
N
h
0t
=
[
N
h
:
N
f
((
N
f
)
2
+ (
N
f
)
2
) +
N
f
(1 +:
N
h
)(
N
h
N
f
+
N
h
N
f
)]
[
N
h
N
f
N
h
N
f
]
2
0 (18)
0:
N
f
0t
=
[
N
f
(1 +:
N
h
)((
N
h
)
2
+ (
N
h
)
2
) +
N
h
:
N
f
(
N
h
N
f
+
N
h
N
f
)]
[
N
h
N
f
N
h
N
f
]
2
< 0
where our expressions suppress notational dependencies. Similarly, a change in the trade cost that
aects domestic exports results in the following changes in the numbers of domestic and foreign
9
rms:
0:
N
h
0t
=
[
N
h
(1 +:
N
f
)((
N
f
)
2
+ (
N
f
)
2
) +
N
f
:
N
h
(
N
h
N
f
+
N
h
N
f
)]
[
N
h
N
f
N
h
N
f
]
2
< 0 (19)
0:
N
f
0t
=
[
N
f
:
N
h
((
N
h
)
2
+ (
N
h
)
2
) +
N
h
(1 +:
N
f
)(
N
h
N
f
+
N
h
N
f
)]
[
N
h
N
f
N
h
N
f
]
2
0.
Thus, as previously indicated, an increase in the trade cost along any one channel of trade causes
a decrease in the number of rms in the exporting country and an increase in the number of rms
in the importing country.
Finally, we dene the following long-run price and quantity functions. It is apparent that the
long-run prices are ultimately functions of the trade costs:
e
1
N
(t
, t) 1(Q
N
(:
N
h
(t
, t), :
N
f
(t
, t), t))
e
1
N
(t
, t) 1
(Q
N
(:
N
h
(t
, t), :
N
f
(t
, t), t
)).
Similarly, the long-run outputs of domestic and foreign rms in the domestic market is ultimately
determined by the underlying trade costs:
e
N
h
(t
, t)
N
h
(:
N
h
(t
, t), :
N
f
(t
, t), t)
e
N
f
(t
, t)
N
f
(:
N
h
(t
, t), :
N
f
(t
, t), t).
Of course, the long-run outputs of domestic and foreign rms in the foreign market may be similarly
characterized:
e
N
h
(t
, t)
N
h
(:
N
h
(t
, t), :
N
f
(t
, t), t
)
e
N
f
(t
, t)
N
f
(:
N
h
(t
, t), :
N
f
(t
, t), t
).
These denitions identify the precise channels through which trade costs alter long-run prices and
quantities. Our next step is to characterize the overall eect that a change in a trade cost has on
long-run prices and trade volumes.
2.4 Long-Run Comparative Statics on Prices
The comparative statics results for prices reect the rm-delocation eect. In particular, observe
that
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
= 1
0
(Q
N
)[
0Q
N
0:
h
0:
N
h
0t
+
0Q
N
0:
f
0:
N
f
0t
+
0Q
N
0t
].
Using (8) and (18), we nd that
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
f
e
N
h
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
< 0, (20)
10
where the inequality uses the fact that (16) holds in particular at the free-entry values for the
numbers of domestic and foreign rms under our assumption that t 0 and t
0. In other
words, we see from (20) that long-run prices in this model behave in a surprising manner and in
fact exhibit the Metzler paradox: a higher import tari (or a higher foreign export tari) induces
so much domestic entry that the local domestic price actually falls.
Next, consider the eect on
e
1
N
of an increase in t
. We have
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
= 1
0
(Q
N
)[
0Q
N
0:
h
0:
N
h
0t
+
0Q
N
0:
f
0:
N
f
0t
].
Using (8), (19) and (16), it follows that
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
f
e
N
h
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
0 (21)
under our assumption that t 0 and t
0, and proceeding as
above, we nd that
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
f
e
N
h
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
< 0. (22)
and
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
h
e
N
f
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
0. (23)
The price eects of trade taxes described by (20) through (23) represent the most striking
implication of the rm-delocation eect, but they are not by themselves enough to determine the
impact of trade taxes on welfare. In order to determine that, we need to know as well how trade
taxes impact trade volumes. We turn to this question next.
2.5 Long-Run Comparative Statics on Trade Volumes
Trade taxes impact trade volumes in this model through two channels: they eect the export sales
per rm in a given country; and they eect the number of rms located in that country. We have
already derived expressions for the second channel. What remains is to derive expressions for the
rst channel, so that we may then evaluate the impact of trade taxes on trade volumes.
Notice that, for a given market and any given numbers of domestic and foreign rms, and using
the linear structure of our model, the rst-order conditions (2) and (5) for prot maximization
imply that a rms best-response and thus Cournot-Nash quantity must equal the eective markup
for the rm in that market. Consequently, we may use our knowledge of how long-run prices vary
11
with trade costs, as captured above in equations (20)-(23), to deduce how long-run rm quantities
vary with trade costs.
Consider, then, export sales per home rm e
N
h
(t
(Q
N
) (c +t
) =
N
h
. This relationship must hold in particular at
the free-entry numbers of rms; thus,
e
1
N
(t
, t) (c +t
) = e
N
h
(t
, t)
0t
=
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
h
e
N
f
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
0 (24)
0e
N
h
(t
, t)
0t
=
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
1 =
e
N
h
e
N
f
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
< 0.
Thus, when the trade cost imposed on foreign exports rises, domestic entry and foreign exit occur.
The foreign exit is suciently intense that the foreign price actually rises, with the result that
each domestic rm now exports more. Likewise, when the trade cost imposed on domestic exports
rises, foreign entry is unleashed to such an extent that the price in the foreign market falls. With
domestic rms now receiving a lower eective markup on exports, both because of the higher trade
cost and the lower foreign market price, domestic rms export less.
Of course, similar ndings obtain for the export sales per foreign rm e
N
f
(t
, t) (c +t) = e
N
f
(t
, t)
0t
=
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
1 =
e
N
h
e
N
f
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
< 0 (25)
0e
N
f
(t
, t)
0t
=
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
f
e
N
h
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
0.
Thus, when the trade cost imposed on foreign exports is increased, domestic entry occurs and the
domestic price falls. Due to the reduced domestic price as well as the direct cost of the higher trade
cost, each foreign rm reduces its exports to the domestic market. When the trade cost imposed
on domestic exports is increased, domestic exit occurs, the domestic price rises, and so each foreign
rm exports more to the domestic market.
6
6
We emphasize the impacts of trade costs on export volumes because these impacts will enter directly in the
analysis below. But the impacts of trade costs on local-market sales volumes predicted by the model may be of some
independent interest, because they are somewhat surprising. Specically, proceeding as above, it is direct to establish
that an increase in the trade cost imposed on foreign exports leads each domestic rm to reduce its local-market sales
and leads each foreign rm to increase its local-market sales; in particular, we nd that
@e q
N
h
(
;)
@
=
e q
N
f
e q
N
h
[e q
N
h
e q
N
f
e q
N
h
e q
N
f
]
<
0 and
@e q
N
f
(
;)
@
=
e q
N
h
e q
N
f
[e q
N
h
e q
N
f
e q
N
h
e q
N
f
]
> 0. And similarly, an increase in the trade cost imposed on domestic exports
leads each domestic rm to increase its local-market sales and leads each foreign rm to reduce its local-market sales;
in particular, we nd that
@e q
N
h
(
;)
@
=
e q
N
f
e q
N
h
[e q
N
h
e q
N
f
e q
N
h
e q
N
f
]
> 0 and
@e q
N
f
(
;)
@
=
e q
N
f
e q
N
h
[e q
N
h
e q
N
f
e q
N
h
e q
N
f
]
< 0.
12
Armed with (24) and (25) as well as our earlier expressions (18) and (19), we may now turn
to the nal task of this section and consider how long-run trade volumes vary with trade costs.
As noted above, an understanding of the relationship between export volumes and trade costs is
needed to determine the impact of trade taxes on welfare, which is in turn important for subsequent
sections, when we consider the determination of unilateral, ecient and Nash trade policies. We
present our ndings initially without an assumption that symmetric trade policies are adopted for
the domestic and foreign markets. We then assume symmetric trade policies and report simplied
expressions.
To begin, we dene the home countrys export volume as
1
N
(t
, t) :
N
h
(t
, t)e
N
h
(t
, t). (26)
Now consider how the domestic export volume varies with the trade cost that confronts foreign
exports. Using (26), we have that
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
= :
N
h
(t
, t)
0e
N
h
(t
, t)
0t
+ e
N
h
(t
, t)
0:
N
h
(t
, t)
0t
0,
where the inequality follows from (24) and (18). Thus, if foreign exporters confront a higher trade
cost, then the number of domestic rms, the export sales of each domestic rm and thus the volume
of domestic exports must rise. Using (24) and (18), we may derive the following expression:
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
(27)
=
:
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
f
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] +:
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
h
[(e
N
f
)
2
+ (e
N
f
)
2
] + e
N
h
e
N
f
(e
N
h
e
N
f
+ e
N
h
e
N
f
)
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
2
0.
Next, consider how the domestic export volume varies with the trade cost that confronts do-
mestic exports. Referring to (26), we see that
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
= :
N
h
(t
, t)
0e
N
h
(t
, t)
0t
+ e
N
h
(t
, t)
0:
N
h
(t
, t)
0t
< 0,
where the inequality follows from (24) and (19). Thus, if the trade cost that faces domestic exporters
increases, then the number of domestic rms, the export volume of each domestic rm and thus
the volume of domestic exports must fall. Referring to (24) and (19), we may derive the following
useful expression:
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
:
N
h
(e
N
f
)
2
((e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
) + (e
N
h
)
2
(1 +:
N
f
)((e
N
f
)
2
+ (e
N
f
)
2
)
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
2
< 0. (28)
In sum, domestic export volume is increasing in the trade cost that confronts foreign exports and
decreasing in the trade cost that faces domestic exports.
We can similarly derive long-run comparative statics ndings for foreign export volumes. Den-
13
ing the foreign countrys export volume as
1
N
(t
, t) :
N
f
(t
, t)e
N
f
(t
, t), (29)
we then have
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
= :
N
f
(t
, t)
0e
N
f
(t
, t)
0t
+ e
N
f
(t
, t)
0:
N
f
(t
, t)
0t
0,
where the inequality follows from (25) and (19). Using (25) and (19), we nd that
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
(30)
=
:
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
h
((e
N
f
)
2
+ (e
N
f
)
2
) +:
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
f
((e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
) + e
N
f
e
N
h
(e
N
h
e
N
f
+ e
N
h
e
N
f
)
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
2
0.
Finally, we consider how foreign export volume varies with the trade cost that foreign exporters
incur. We thus compute
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
= :
N
f
(t
, t)
0e
N
f
(t
, t)
0t
+ e
N
f
(t
, t)
0:
N
f
(t
, t)
0t
< 0,
where the inequality follows from (25) and (18). Referring to (25) and (18), we have that
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
:
N
f
(e
N
h
)
2
((e
N
f
)
2
+ (e
N
f
)
2
) + (e
N
f
)
2
(1 +:
N
h
)((e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
)
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
2
< 0. (31)
In sum, foreign export volume increases when the trade cost facing domestic exports rises and
decreases when the trade cost facing foreign exports rises.
A case of particular interest arises when t = t
, t)
0t
=
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
2e
N
h
e
N
h
[:
N
h
((e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
) + (e
N
h
)
2
]
[(e
N
h
)
2
(e
N
h
)
2
]
2
0. (32)
Likewise, at a symmetric point, we may simplify (28) and (31) to get:
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
((e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
)[:
N
h
(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
(1 +:
N
h
)]
[(e
N
h
)
2
(e
N
h
)
2
]
2
< 0. (33)
Note that (17) yields
N
h
N
h
= t at a symmetric point, and so
N
h
N
h
0 under our assumption
that t 0.
14
3 Unilateral and Ecient Trade Policies
With the key properties of the Cournot delocation model now developed, we are ready to consider
the determination of trade policies. We begin by dening national welfare. We then ask whether
a country could gain by introducing a slight departure from free trade in exactly one of its trade
policies. Venables (1985) considers this question as well, and we re-state his results regarding
unilateral departures from free trade here. In particular, we nd that a country always gains from
introducing a slight import tari, provided only that the other countrys trade policies are such
that in each market the trade cost is positive and trade is not prohibited. Further, a country gains
by introducing a small export subsidy, if all other policies in both countries are set at free trade.
Finally, the introduction of an import tari or an export subsidy also leads to a reduction in the
welfare of the other country, if all policies in both countries are initially set at the free-trade level.
We also establish the novel nding that free-trade policies (i.e., t = t
c+t
h
+t
f
,
where t
h
is the (specic) domestic export tari and t
f
is the (specic) foreign import tari.
When evaluating trade policies, we assume that the domestic and foreign governments maximize
their respective long-run national incomes. In the long run, prots are driven to zero, and national
income is simply the sum of consumer surplus and net tari revenue. Letting Co(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) denote
domestic consumer surplus in the long-run equilibrium, the domestic government thus maximizes
G(t
, t, t
h
, t
h
) (34)
= Co(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) +t
h
:
N
f
(t
, t)e
N
f
(t
, t) +t
h
:
N
h
(t
, t)e
N
h
(t
, t)
= Co(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) +t
h
1
N
(t
, t) +t
h
1
N
(t
, t),
where Co
0
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) = 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) (1
e
1
N
(t
(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
denote foreign consumer surplus, the foreign government maximizes
G
(t
, t, t
f
, t
f
) (35)
= Co
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) +t
f
:
N
h
(t
, t)e
N
h
(t
, t) +t
f
:
N
f
(t
, t)e
N
f
(t
, t)
= Co
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) +t
f
1
N
(t
, t) +t
f
1
N
(t
, t),
7
Markusen and Venables (1988, p. 315, Result 5) report that free trade is ecient in a free-entry linear-demand
Cournot segmented-markets setting, where the products of dierent countries are not perfect substitutes and transport
costs between countries are absent. We are unaware of a result that establishes the eciency of free trade in this
setting when products are perfect substitutes and transport costs exist, as in the environment we consider here.
15
where Co
0
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) = 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) (1
e
1
N
(t
, t)).
3.2 Introduction of a Small Import Tari
Now let us suppose that the domestic country initially adopts free trade with its import and export
taris. With respect to foreign trade policies, we assume for the moment only that the foreign
governments trade policies are such that the trade cost is positive (i.e., t 0) and trade is not
prohibited (i.e., 1
N
(t
, t) 0). From this starting point, would the domestic government gain
by slightly increasing its import tari? To answer this question, we use (34) and compute
dG
dt
h
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+1
N
(t
, t) +t
h
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
+t
h
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
. (36)
Under our supposition that the domestic country is initially adopting a free-trade policy with
respect to its import and export taris, the last two terms in (36) disappear. We may thus rewrite
(36) as
dG
dt
h
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+1
N
(t
, t) 0, (37)
where the inequality follows since 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) 0, 1
N
(t
, t),0t < 0 by (20) under our assumption that trade costs are
positive. Thus, with the rm-delocation eect giving 0
e
1
N
(t
dt
h
= 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+t
f
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
+t
f
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
. (38)
Now, if we suppose that the foreign country also initially adopts a free-trade policy with respect to
its import and export taris, then the last two terms in (38) disappear. We may then rewrite (38)
as
dG
dt
h
= 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
< 0, (39)
where the inequality follows at global free trade, since under these policies 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) 0
and trade costs are positive so that 0
e
1
N
(t
h
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+1
N
(t
, t) +t
h
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
+t
h
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
. (40)
If the domestic country starts at free trade with respect to its import and export policies, we thus
nd that the last two terms in (40) again disappear, and so we get
dG
dt
h
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+1
N
(t
, t). (41)
Assuming that the foreign trade policies are nonprohibitive and such that trade costs are positive,
we have that 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) 0, 0
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t
0 by (21), and 1
N
(t
, t) 0. Referring to
(41), we thus see that the introduction of a small export tari has competing eects on domestic
welfare: the export tari induces exit and thereby a higher domestic price, which reduces consumer
surplus, but it also generates additional tari revenue relative to the free-trade benchmark.
To sign the expression in (41), we use 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) = :
N
h
e
N
h
+ :
N
f
e
N
f
, (26) and (21) and nd
that, at free-trade domestic policies,
dG
dt
h
= e
N
h
e
N
f
[e
N
f
:
N
f
+:
N
h
e
N
h
]
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
< 0,
where the inequality follows under our assumptions that t 0 and t
dt
h
= 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+t
f
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
+t
f
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
. (42)
If we now suppose that the foreign country also initially adopts a free-trade policy with respect to
its import and export taris, then the last two terms in (42) disappear. Under this supposition, we
may rewrite (42) as
dG
dt
h
= 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
0, (43)
where the inequality in (43) follows at global free trade since then 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t
, is
dG
dt
h
+
dG
dt
h
(44)
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+1
N
(t
, t) 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
= 0,
where the nal equality follows after using 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) = :
N
h
e
N
h
+ :
N
f
e
N
f
, 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) =
:
N
h
e
N
h
+:
N
f
e
N
f
, (20), (29) and (23). Thus, assuming that all other policies are set at free trade, we
see from (44) that the ecient import tari for the domestic government is free trade. Similarly,
18
under these assumptions, the ecient import tari for the foreign government is free trade.
8
The next step is to make sure that free trade is the ecient export policy for the domestic
country, when all other policies are set at free trade. Using (37) and (39), we nd that at global
free trade the impact on joint welfare of the introduction of a small export tari imposed by the
domestic government is
dG
dt
h
+
dG
dt
h
(45)
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+1
N
(t
, t) 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t))
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
= 0,
where the nal equality uses 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) = e
N
f
:
N
f
+:
N
h
e
N
h
, 1
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) = :
N
h
e
N
h
+:
N
f
e
N
f
,
(21), (26) and (22). Assuming that other policies are set at free trade, we see from (45) that the
domestic government maximizes joint welfare by adopting an export policy of free trade. Similarly,
under these assumptions, the foreign government maximizes joint welfare by adopting an export
policy of free trade.
9
Thus, for our linear model, a policy of free trade in import and export policies by both countries
is ecient. Of course, an ecient outcome can be achieved with other trade-policy vectors as well.
In particular, we note that joint welfare ultimately depends only on the total trade costs, t and t
.
To see this, observe that
J(t
, t) G(t
, t, t
h
, t
h
) +G
(t
, t, t
f
, t
f
)
= Co(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) +t
h
1
N
(t
, t) +t
h
1
N
(t
, t)
+Co
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) +t
f
1
N
(t
, t) +t
f
1
N
(t
, t)
= Co(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) +Co
(
e
1
N
(t
, t)) + (t c)1
N
(t
, t) + (t
c)1
N
(t
, t)
Since free trade yields t = t
;)
@
, which by (33) is strictly negative. Hence the second-order condition associated with (44) is
satised.
9
Dierentiating (40) and (42) with respect to t
h
and evaluating the sum of the resulting expressions at global free
trade yields
@E
N
(
;)
@
, which by (33) is strictly negative. Hence the second-order condition associated with (45) is
satised.
10
To formally establish that =
;)
@
= 0 =
@J(
;)
@
when =
= when and
are
jointly selected if the Jacobian matrix associated with the system of rst-order conditions is negative denite. The
preceding two footnotes imply that, when =
= ,
@
2
J(
;)
@
2
=
@E
N
(
;)
@
=
@E
N
(
;)
@
=
@
2
J(
;)
@
2
< 0. We
further nd that
@
2
J(
;)
@@
=
@E
N
(
;)
@
=
@E
N
(
;)
@
when =
;)
@
2
@
2
J(
;)
@
2
(
@
2
J(
;)
@@
)
2
> 0 at =
h
=
t
f
= t
f
= 0) is ecient.
Together, Propositions 1, 2 and 3 indicate that global free trade is ecient and yet not a Nash
equilibrium in trade policies. Our next task is to characterize the Nash equilibrium trade policies.
4 Nash Trade Policies
At this point, we know that free trade is ecient, and we know that from this starting point each
country has a unilateral incentive to impose an import tari and an export subsidy. These ndings
thus provide one perspective as to why governments might seek an agreement under which ceilings
are imposed on import taris and export subsidies. We next consider the Nash equilibrium in trade
policies, and we show that governments use import and export taris in a Nash equilibrium. This
result is novel to the literature and provides a richer perspective on the treatment of import taris
and export subsidies in trade agreements. In particular, an eciency enhancing trade agreement
would place a ceiling on export subsidies only once import taris have been reduced through
negotiations to a level that is suciently close to free trade. As explained in the Introduction, this
richer perspective thus provides one interpretation of the introduction of the SCM Agreement into
the WTO in 1995, after the completion of several earlier negotiation rounds that led to substantial
reductions in import taris.
To characterize Nash equilibrium trade policies in the Cournot delocation model, we are led
to consider the tari reaction functions for the domestic and foreign countries, respectively. The
domestic rst-order conditions for t
h
and t
h
are given by dG,dt
h
= 0 and dG,dt
h
= 0, respectively,
and may be analyzed using (36) and (40) above.
11
Furthermore, since the two countries are sym-
metric, we may focus on a symmetric Nash equilibrium, in which the domestic Nash import tari
equals the foreign Nash import tari, and the domestic Nash export tari equals the foreign Nash
export tari. Thus, we can focus on the domestic tari reaction functions and the determination
of the domestic Nash import tari, t
N
h
and Nash export tari, t
N
h
.
To this end, we rst use (40) and (36) and subtract the domestic rst-order condition for t
h
11
The second-order conditions for the domestic countrys import and export tari selection hold at the Nash
equilibrium if
@
2
G
@t
2
h
< 0;
@
2
G
@t
2
h
< 0 and (
@
2
G
@t
2
h
)(
@
2
G
@t
2
h
) (
@
2
G
@t
h
@t
h
) > 0, where all expressions are evaluated with all taris
set at their Nash levels. The second-order conditions are dicult to conrm analytically, since the expressions (54)
and (55) that we derive below for the Nash tari levels are implicit equations. (Recall that the numbers of rms and
per-rm quantities are functions of taris.) Nevertheless, we can show that the second-order conditions must hold
at the Nash equilibrium when the quantity exported by each rm, e q
h
, is suciently small. This will be the case if
the transportation cost, , is suciently large. In addition, we have conrmed that the second-order conditions are
satised at the Nash equilibrium for a variety of specications for the models parameters, c; F and .
20
from the domestic rst-order condition for t
h
. This yields
0 =
dG
dt
h
dG
dt
h
(46)
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))[
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
] + [t
N
h
t
N
h
][
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
],
where we use symmetry to impose 1
N
(t
, t) = 1
N
(t
, t), 01
N
(t
, t),0t
= 01
N
(t
, t),0t and
01
N
(t
, t),0t = 01
N
(t
, t),0t
.
To further simplify (46), we compute 0
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t
0
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t and 01
N
(t
, t),0t
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
f
e
N
h
+ e
N
f
e
N
h
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
.
At a point of symmetry, therefore,
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
h
e
N
h
e
N
h
0, (47)
where the inequality follows since we have from (17) that e
N
h
e
N
h
=
+n
f
(+
)
1+n
h
+n
f
= t 0 at a
symmetric point, under the assumption that t 0. Next, we may similarly use (28) and (27) and
establish after simplication that, at a symmetric point,
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
[e
N
h
e
N
h
]
2
< 0, (48)
where the inequality again follows at a symmetric point under our assumption that t 0.
We may now return to our subtraction equation (46) and make the substitutions just derived
in (47) and (48). After making these substitutions and simplifying, we get, for a symmetric point,
that
0 =
dG
dt
h
dG
dt
h
= :
N
h
[e
N
h
+ e
N
h
][
e
N
h
e
N
h
e
N
h
] [t
N
h
t
N
h
]
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
[e
N
h
e
N
h
]
2
.
Thus, at a symmetric Nash equilibrium, we conclude that
t
N
h
t
N
h
=
:
N
h
[e
N
h
+ e
N
h
]e
N
h
[e
N
h
e
N
h
]
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
. (49)
Importantly, (49) conrms that t
N
h
t
N
h
, provided that e
N
h
e
N
h
= t 0. In other words, the
domestic import tari is greater than the domestic export tari precisely because of the local-market
bias in rm sales.
Our next step is to use (36) and (40) and add the domestic rst-order condition for t
h
to the
21
domestic rst-order condition for t
h
. We obtain
0 =
dG
dt
h
+
dG
dt
h
(50)
= 1(
e
1
N
(t
, t))[
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
] + 21
N
(t
, t) + [t
N
h
+t
N
h
][
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
+
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
],
where we use symmetry to impose 1
N
(t
, t) = 1
N
(t
, t), 01
N
(t
, t),0t
= 01
N
(t
, t),0t and
01
N
(t
, t),0t = 01
N
(t
, t),0t
.
To further analyze (50), we compute 0
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t + 0
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t
and 01
N
(t
, t),0t +
01
N
(t
, t),0t
, t)
0t
+
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
h
[e
N
f
e
N
f
]
[e
N
h
e
N
f
e
N
h
e
N
f
]
.
At a point of symmetry, therefore,
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
+
0
e
1
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
e
N
h
[e
N
h
+ e
N
h
]
0. (51)
Similarly, we may use (27) and (28) and establish after simplication that, at a symmetric point,
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
+
01
N
(t
, t)
0t
=
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
[e
N
h
+ e
N
h
]
2
< 0. (52)
At this point, we may return to our addition equation (50) and make the substitutions just
derived in (51) and (52). After making these substitutions and simplifying, we get, for a symmetric
point, that
0 =
dG
dt
h
+
dG
dt
h
= :
N
h
e
N
h
[t
N
h
+t
N
h
]
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
[e
N
h
+ e
N
h
]
2
.
Thus, at a symmetric Nash equilibrium, we conclude that
t
h
+t
h
=
:
N
h
e
N
h
[e
N
h
+ e
N
h
]
2
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
0. (53)
Importantly, (53) indicates that, at the Nash equilibrium, the total trade tax and thus the total
trade cost is positive: t = t
0 indeed holds.
At this point, we may add (49) and (53) to obtain
t
N
h
=
:
N
h
(e
N
h
+ e
N
h
)e
N
h
e
N
h
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
0. (54)
This implicit equation tells us that the Nash import tari must be positive. Using (53) and (54)
22
and simplifying, we may now recover the Nash export policy as
t
N
h
=
:
N
h
(e
N
h
)
2
(e
N
h
+ e
N
h
)
:
N
h
[(e
N
h
)
2
+ (e
N
h
)
2
] + (e
N
h
)
2
0. (55)
This implicit equation tells us that the Nash export tari must be positive as well.
We may now conclude as follows:
Proposition 4: In a (symmetric) Nash equilibrium in trade policies, the Nash import and export
taris are both positive, with the Nash import tari being the larger of the two.
Comparing Propositions 3 and 4, we see immediately that Nash trade policies are inecient in
the linear Cournot delocation model.
12
In particular, using the fact that t and t
take symmetric
values in both the ecient free-trade benchmark and the Nash equilibrium, we may conclude from
(52) that too little trade occurs under Nash trade policies.
It is also interesting to compare our characterization in Proposition 4 of the Nash equilibrium
trade policies with Propositions 1 and 2 of the previous section, where we show that a country
can gain by unilaterally departing from global free trade and introducing a small import tari or a
small export subsidy. Viewed from this perspective, our nding of a positive Nash import tari is
perhaps not surprising. Our nding of a positive Nash export tari, however, is more surprising.
How can we reconcile the gain that a country experiences when departing from global free trade
and introducing a small export subsidy with the nding that the Nash equilibrium entails an export
tari? We address this question in the next section.
5 Interpretation of Trade Policy Findings
We now have two sets of ndings. First, starting at global free trade, each country has an incentive
to introduce a small import tari or alternatively a small export subsidy. Second, in a Nash
equilibrium, each country uses an import tari and an export tari. We consider now how to
explain these seemingly contradictory ndings.
When choosing its trade policy, a government seeks to maximize the sum of consumer surplus
and tari revenue. Consumer surplus is governed by the consumption price. Focusing for simplicity
on the domestic country, consider then the iso-price relationship
e
1
N
(t
0t
=
0
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t
0
e
1
N
(t
, t),0t
=
e
N
f
e
N
f
< 1, (56)
12
In Bagwell and Staiger (2009), we consider a more general representation of the Cournot delocation model and
establish that Nash trade policies are inecient. In that paper, however, we do not oer a detailed analysis of the
Nash trade policies. For example, we do not consider there the sign of the Nash export policy.
23
where the inequality holds so long as t + :
N
h
(t + t
are positive. An interesting observation is that a government can adjust its import and
export taris along the upward-sloping iso-price tari function, t
f
, which along with
an initial pair of domestic taris, t
h
and t
h
, generate values t and t
, t) = /. Building on the observation made above, we may now ask which pair
of domestic taris maximizes domestic tari revenue, when the local price is taken as xed. The
associated program is
max
t
h
;t
h
T1(t
h
, t
h
, t
f
, t
f
) = t
h
1
N
(t
, t) +t
h
1
N
(t
, t)
:.t.
e
1
N
(t
, t) = /, t = t
h
+t
f
+c, t
= t
f
+t
h
+c
or equivalently
max
t
h
T1(t
h
, t
h
(t, t
f
, /); t
f
, t
f
) = t
h
1
N
(t
(t, /), t) +t
h
(t, t
f
, /)1
N
(t
f
xed the induced value for t
h
as t
h
and thereby t is varied. In particular, the induced value for t
h
is t
h
(t, t
f
, /) t
(t, /)t
f
c,
where we suppress the dependence on c in the functional notation. The domestic Nash taris, for
example, must solve this program when / =
e
1
N
(t
N
, t
N
).
We can write the rst-order condition for this program as
dT1(t
h
, t
h
(t, t
f
, /), t
f
, t
f
)
dt
h
= [1
N
(t
(t, /), t) +1
N
(t
(t, /), t)
e
N
f
e
N
f
] (57)
+t
h
[
01
N
0t
e
N
f
e
N
f
+
01
N
0t
] +t
h
(t, t
f
, /)[
01
N
0t
e
N
f
e
N
f
+
01
N
0t
] = 0,
where we utilize (56).
Suppose now that we initially place the domestic taris at free trade, while xing the foreign
taris at any non-prohibitive level consistent with positive trade costs. These policies induce a
domestic free-trade price
e
1
N
(t
f
+ c, t
f
+ c) = /
0
. Thus, at this starting point, t
h
= t
h
(t
f
+
c, t
f
, /
0
) = 0. Starting from here, we may ask whether the domestic government would like to
raise its import tari, t
h
, while increasing its export tari, t
h
, a comparable amount as dened
by (56) that serves to preserve the initial domestic free-trade price. The rst-order condition
(57) for our program, evaluated at t
h
= 0 = t
h
, indicates that the domestic country would gain
from such an adjustment, since it would enjoy an increase in tari revenue with no change in
consumer surplus. In particular, the gain in domestic tari revenue and thus domestic welfare is
1
N
(t
(t, /), t) +1
N
(t
is upward sloping. Also, and as Proposition 5 arms, the result of the variation
considered here holds for a wide range of possible foreign tari specications.
14
In fact, the nding reported in Proposition 5 can be strengthened so as to allow for any initial domestic trade
policies satisfying t
h
0 and t
h
0, suggesting that the attractiveness of raising the restrictiveness of both import
and export policies in this fashion may be quite broad.
15
The tari-complementarity eect identied here entails a complementary relationship between a countrys import
and export taris, for the same good. This eect is thus distinct from previously identied tari-complementarity
25
T1(t
h
, t
h
, t
f
, t
f
) = t
h
1
N
(t
, t) +t
h
1
N
(t
h
. We nd that
0
2
T1
0t
h
0t
h
=
01
N
0t
+
01
N
0t
+t
h
0
2
1
N
0t0t
+t
h
0
2
1
N
0t0t
. (58)
Using (27) and (30), and assuming that foreign taris are non-prohibitive and such that trade costs
are positive, we know that 01
N
,0t +01
N
,0t
h
0 when t
h
= 0 = t
h
.
We now summarize our nding to this point as regards the tari-complementarity eect:
Proposition 6: For domestic taris suciently close to free trade, the domestic import and export
taris exert a complementary eect on domestic tari revenue, provided that foreign taris are
non-prohibitive and such that trade costs are positive.
The idea behind the tari-complementarity eect is as follows.
16
When a small export tari,
t
h
, is introduced, tari revenue is enjoyed on those units that are exported. If a small import tari
is then introduced as well, domestic entry occurs and so more domestic units are exported. Thus,
an import tari can increase the marginal revenue of an export tari. Indeed, this must be the
case when the export tari begins at free trade and is then raised. Similarly, if we were to rst
introduce an import tari, then import tari revenue would be enjoyed on imported units; further,
the volume of imports would only grow were an export tari introduced as well, since the export
tari would trigger foreign entry and thus a greater volume of foreign exports. In this way, an export
tari can increase the marginal revenue of an import tari. The described tari-complementarity
eect is general and is not limited to the linear-demand setting; however, when taris begin at
values diering from free trade, then the marginal revenue associated with an initial tari hike is
determined in part by the eect of the hike on the volume of trade on which the initial tari is
applied. A tari hike on the other channel can then alter marginal revenue on the initial channel by
altering the rate at which the initial tari hike aects trade volume on the initial channel. Hence,
when we begin at values diering from free trade, new eects come into play that are associated
with the cross derivatives of the export volume functions.
17
The tari-complementarity eect identied in Proposition 6 provides additional intuition for
the fact that both import taris and export taris are positive in a Nash equilibrium. In eect,
eects that concern complemetary relationships between the (discriminatory) import taris that a country applies to
dierent suppliers of an import good (Bagwell and Staiger, 1999b) or between the import taris of dierent countries
which import a common good (Bagwell and Staiger, 1997).
16
For domestic taris suciently close to free trade, and provided that foreign taris are non-prohibitive and such
that trade costs are positive, we can show that domestic import and export taris also exert a complementary eect
on domestic welfare (i.e.,
@
2
G
@t
h
@t
h
> 0): We emphasize the complementary eect that domestic taris exert on domestic
tari revenue, in order to further develop the intuition underlying Proposition 5.
17
We can show that, at a point of symmetry,
@
2
E
n
@@
=
@
2
E
n
@@
h
involves competing eects.
26
the joint use of import taris and export taris is attractive to governments in the linear Cournot
delocation model, because a tax on trade in one direction encourages trade in the other direction
on which the other trade tax can then collect revenue.
6 Politically Optimal Trade Policies
In the Cournot delocation model, international externalities travel from one countrys trade policy
to another countrys welfare. As a consequence, and as noted above, Nash trade policies are
inecient. In Bagwell and Staiger (2009), we argue at a general level that unilateral trade policies
would be ecient if governments were not motivated by the terms-of-trade implications of their
respective trade policy selections. In this sense, the ineciency attributable to the terms-of-trade
externality is the problem that a trade agreement can be designed to solve. To make this point,
we represent welfare in terms of local and world prices and then dene the politically optimal
policies as the (import and export) trade policies that governments would choose if they were not
motivated by the terms-of-trade implications of their respective selections. The central nding is
that the politically optimal policies are ecient.
In this section, we utilize the additional structure that the linear Cournot delocation model
provides and characterize the specic trade policies that are politically optimal in this model.
Given that politically optimal trade policies are known to be ecient, we know from Proposition 3
that politically optimal trade policies must impose a net trade tax of zero (i.e., t = t
= c). Thus,
if the politically optimal policies were to involve an import tari along one channel of trade, then
an osetting export subsidy would be required along this same channel. We establish in this section
that a (symmetric) political optimum exists for the linear Cournot delocation model in which global
free trade is achieved (i.e., each country adopts a policy of free trade with respect to its imports
and exports). For the linear Cournot delocation model, therefore, if countries were not motivated
by the terms-of-trade implications of their policies, then it is reasonable to expect that they would
achieve eciency by adopting the specic policy vector of global free trade. After establishing this
result, we then comment briey at the end of this section on the implications of this nding for the
interpretation of the WTO SCM Agreement.
6.1 Welfare Functions
Our rst task is to rewrite domestic and foreign welfare as functions of local and world prices. We
thus begin by dening the full set of local and world prices. Recall that the domestic and foreign
local prices may be respectively expressed as
e
1
N
(t
, t) and
e
1
N
(t
, t)
e
1
N
(t
, t) t
h
and 1
wN
(t
f
, t
, t)
e
1
N
(t
, t) t
f
. We
thus dene 1
wN
(t
h
, t
, t) to represent the price of foreign exports on the world market (i.e., prior
to the imposition of the domestic import tari, t
h
), while we dene 1
wN
(t
f
, t
, t) to represent the
price of domestic exports on the world market (i.e., prior to the imposition of the foreign import
tari, t
f
). Finally, it is convenient to consider a unit that will be exported and to dene its local
27
price in the exporting country as the price that remains once the import tari, export tari and
transport cost are subtracted from its local price in the importing country. Specically, we dene
the following local prices
1
N
(t
, t)
e
1
N
(t
, t) t
= 1
wN
(t
f
, t
, t) t
h
c
1
N
(t
, t)
e
1
N
(t
, t) t = 1
wN
(t
h
, t
, t) t
f
c.
We note that 1
N
(t
, t).
18
We next represent rm output, entry levels, and trade volumes as functions of local prices.
Let us start with the Cournot-Nash rm quantities. Using t =
e
1
N
(t
, t) 1
N
(t
, t) and t
=
e
1
N
(t
, t)1
N
(t
, t) and e
N
f
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
) = e
N
f
(t
, t). Similarly,
in the foreign market, we have the following expressions: e
N
h
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
) = e
N
h
(t
, t)
and e
N
f
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
) = e
N
f
(t
, t) and :
N
f
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
) = :
N
f
(t
, t) and 1
N
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
) = 1
N
(t
, t).
At this point, we have all of the ingredients for representing domestic and foreign welfares as
functions of the local and world prices that the respective tari selections induce. Referring to (34),
we may now rewrite domestic welfare as
\(
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
,
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
) (59)
= Co(
e
1
N
) + [
e
1
N
1
wN
]1
N
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
)
+[1
wN
1
N
c]1
N
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
).
Notice that, for any xed set of trade policies, \(
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
,
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
) = G(t
, t, t
h
, t
h
),
18
Using (20), we may now see that an import tari has the traditional eect of generating an improvement in
the importing countrys terms-of-trade. In particular, dP
wN
=dt
h
= @
e
P
N
(
h
= @
e
P
N
(
; )=@
(
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
,
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
) (60)
= Co
(
e
1
N
) + [
e
1
N
1
wN
]1
N
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
)
+[1
wN
1
N
c]1
N
(
e
1
N
1
N
,
e
1
N
1
N
).
Just as for the domestic welfare expressions, we have that, for any xed set of trade policies,
\
(
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
,
e
1
N
, 1
N
, 1
wN
) = G
(t
, t, t
f
, t
f
).
6.2 Political Optimum
We are now prepared to characterize politically optimal trade policies. We focus rst on the
domestic country, who we suppose acts as if \
P
wN 0 and \
P
wN 0 when choosing its politically
optimal trade policies. The rst-order condition for politically optimal domestic import policy is
then
\
e
P
N
0
e
1
N
0t
+\
R
N
01
N
0t
+\
e
P
N
0
e
1
N
0t
+\
R
N
01
N
0t
= 0. (61)
Likewise, the rst-order condition for the politically optimal domestic export policy is
\
e
P
N
0
e
1
N
0t
+\
R
N
01
N
0t
+\
e
P
N
0
e
1
N
0t
+\
R
N
01
N
0t
= 0. (62)
At this point, we have derived two conditions (i.e., (61) and (62)) with which to determine the
politically optimal levels of the two domestic trade-policy selections (i.e., t
h
and t
h
). Of course,
we can derive two symmetric equations for the foreign country, and these equations can be used
to determine the politically optimal levels of the two foreign trade-policy selections. To keep the
analysis simple, however, we will focus here on the existence and characterization of a symmetric
political optimum, wherein t
f
= t
h
and t
f
= t
h
. With the symmetry requirement imposed, our
task is to characterize the values for t
h
and t
h
that satisfy (61) and (62).
In the Appendix, we use the analysis of the model developed in previous sections and establish
that (61) and (62) are uniquely satised when t
h
= t
h
= 0.
19
We may thus summarize our ndings
in this section as follows:
Proposition 7: There exists a unique symmetric political optimum, and in this political optimum
each country practices free trade with respect to its import and export policies.
In short, if governments were not motivated by the terms-of-trade implications of their trade poli-
cies, then they would achieve an ecient outcome; furthermore, in the linear Cournot delocation
19
We may also verify that the second-order conditions for the political optimum are satised. In the Appendix, we
simplify and express the rst-order conditions for the politically optimal domestic import and export policies as (66)
and (69). At global free trade, we may easily verify that the Jacobian matrix associated with these two rst-order
conditions is the same as the Jacobian matrix associated with the rst-order conditions for ecient taris. We show
above in footnote 10 that this matrix is negative denite.
29
model, they would in particular achieve eciency by individually setting each import and export
tari equal to zero. Global free trade is thus the unique symmetric political optimum for this
model.
An implication of this nding is that the prohibition of export subsidies contained in the WTO
SCM Agreement is compatible with the political optimum in this model. This feature strengthens
the ability of the linear Cournot delocation model to provide an interpretation of the treatment of
export subsidies in the GATT/WTO, given that other design features of the GATT/WTO can also
be interpreted as guiding governments toward ecient politically optimal outcomes (see Bagwell
and Staiger, 1999a, 2009).
7 Conclusion
In this paper, we consider trade policies and agreements in the linear Cournot delocation model. We
have shown that this model is capable of delivering a potential eciency-enhancing interpretation
for WTO rules on export subsidies. This distinguishes the Cournot delocation model from other
formal analyses of the treatment of export subsidies in trade agreements, which as we have ob-
served suggest that GATT/WTO eorts to reign in export subsidies may be best interpreted as an
inecient victory for exporting governments that comes at the expense of importing governments.
This raises the question whether the Cournot delocation model oers a compelling rationale
for the GATT/WTO eorts to restrict the use of export subsidies. This question is not merely
academic. Many GATT/WTO disputes involve export subsidies, and some of the longest-running
disputes, and largest in terms of authorized retaliation, have centered on government programs that
were alleged to operate as export subsidies.
20
So there is much at stake in assessing the legitimacy
of the SCMs prohibition against export subsidies.
This question is ultimately an empirical one, since it boils down to whether the Cournot de-
location model, or rather any of the other models that deliver the more skeptical view of the
GATT/WTO stance on export subsidies, better captures the forces that are relevant for under-
standing and interpreting the GATT/WTO. As a consequence, the question cannot be answered
here. But we mention several points that may be relevant in providing an eventual answer.
First, we have established our results in a linear-demand version of the Cournot delocation
model. This raises the obvious question whether the eciency-enhancing interpretation for WTO
rules on export subsidies would survive with general non-linear demands. This is a subtle question,
because linearity plays several roles in the model. On the one hand, in a companion paper (Bagwell
and Staiger, 2009) we establish that export subsidies have non-traditional (benecial) terms-of-trade
eects for the exporting country in the Cournot delocation model even when demands are non-
linear, indicating that the essential beggar-thy-neighbor features of export subsidies that argues for
20
For example, the U.S.-EU civil aircraft dispute concerning government support for Boeing and Airbus, which
includes allegations of illegal export subsidies, has spanned a period of almost 25 years, while the largest level of
retaliation ever authorized in a GATT/WTO dispute concerned the U.S.-EU dispute over the U.S. FISC program,
which amounted to an export subsidy.
30
their restraint (see note 18) is not limited to a linear-demand setting. This suggests that the main
insights from the linear Cournot delocation model are likely to survive in some form with general
non-linear demands. On the other hand, when demands are non-linear, global free trade may not
be ecient in this setting, and so whether the prohibition of export subsidies is compatible with the
ecient political optimum then remains an open question. On balance, though, the assumption of
linear demands does not seem to be driving the case for restraining export subsidies on eciency
grounds that arises in the Cournot delocation model. Hence, evidence that the Cournot delocation
model with general non-linear demands has empirical relevance would lend support to the view of
GATT/WTO export subsidy agreements that we develop here.
Second, we have adopted the Cournot version of the rm-delocation model formalized by Ven-
ables (1985), but Venables (1987) has also formalized the rm-delocation eect in a dierentiated
product monopolistic competition setting, a setting that has been used recently to explore features
of trade agreements in Ossa (2009) and also in Bagwell and Staiger (2009). This raises the question
whether the monopolistic competition version of the rm-delocation model might also deliver an
eciency rationale for the prohibition of export subsidies. Here the answer is no. As established
in Bagwell and Staiger (2009), in that model, as in other formal analyses of export subsidies and
for the same reason, eciency requires that export subsidies should, if anything, be encouraged by
a trade agreement. Hence, it is the empirical relevance of the Cournot version of the delocation
model that is at issue here.
And nally, we emphasize that there may of course not be just one answer to this question:
the Cournot delocation model might oer a compelling rationale for the GATT/WTO eorts to
restrict the use of export subsidies in some areas (e.g., agriculture), but not in others (e.g., civil
aircraft). Viewed in this light, and together with existing theories, the Cournot delocation model
and the results we have established here may simply help to provide a more nuanced and complete
understanding of the treatment of export subsidies in trade agreements.
31
Appendix
Proof of Proposition 7: To evaluate (61), we use (59) and nd that
\
e
P
N
= :
N
h
e
N
h
+t
h
01
N
,0t +t
h
01
N
,0t (63)
\
R
N = t
h
01
N
,0t
h
01
N
,0t
:
N
h
e
N
h
\
e
P
N
= t
h
01
N
,0t
+t
h
01
N
,0t
\
R
N = t
h
01
N
,0t t
h
01
N
,0t.
Next, using our denitions for 1
N
(t
, t) and 1
N
(t
h
01
N
,0t = 0 (65)
At this point, we exploit the linear-demand structure of the model and calculate the bracketed term in (65).
Using (20) and (23), we nd that
e
N
h
0
e
1
N
0t
+ e
N
h
0
e
1
N
0t
= 0.
Thus, in the linear Cournot delocation model, the rst-order condition for the politically optimal domestic
import policy can be rewritten as
t
h
01
N
,0t +t
h
01
N
,0t = 0. (66)
We notice that (66) is satised when the domestic country practices free trade with respect to its import
and export policies.
Consider now (62). Using our denitions for 1
N
(t
, t) and 1
N
(t
=
0
e
1
N
0t
1 and
01
N
0t
=
0
e
1
N
0t
. (67)
Using (63) and (67), we may rewrite (62) as
:
N
h
fe
N
h
0
e
1
N
0t
+ e
N
h
0
e
1
N
0t
e
N
h
g +t
h
01
N
,0t
+t
h
01
N
,0t
= 0. (68)
As above, we now exploit the linear-demand structure of the model and calculate the bracketed term in (68).
Using (21) and (22), we nd that
e
N
h
0
e
1
N
0t
+ e
N
h
0
e
1
N
0t
e
N
h
= 0.
Thus, in the linear Cournot delocation model, the rst-order condition for the politically optimal domestic
export policy can be rewritten as
t
h
01
N
,0t
+t
h
01
N
,0t
= 0. (69)
32
Notice that (69) is also satised when the domestic country practices free trade with respect to its import
and export policies.
We now see that (66) and (69) are satised when t
h
= t
h
= 0. Thus, in the linear Cournot delocation
model, there exists a (symmetric) political optimum in which both countries practice free trade with respect
to their import and export policies. Furthermore, at a symmetric point, we know from (32), (33) and (52),
respectively, that 01
N
,0t = 01
N
,0t
0, 01
N
,0t
= 01
N
,0t < 0 and 01
N
,0t +01
N
,0t
< 0. This
information is sucient to tell us that global free trade is in fact the unique symmetric political optimum.
Proposition 7 is thus established.
33
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34