Deliberate Surrender? The Impact of Interwar Indian Protection
Author(s) -
Vellore Arthi,
Markus Lampe,
Ashwin Nair,
Kevin O’Rourke
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nber working paper series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w27178
Subject(s) - commodity , tariff , surrender , context (archaeology) , economics , international trade , international economics , commercial policy , currency , trade diversion , value (mathematics) , trade barrier , empire , international free trade agreement , political science , geography , law , finance , monetary economics , archaeology , machine learning , computer science
Research on the quantitative impact of interwar protection on trade flows remains scarce, and much of it has concluded that the impact was surprisingly small. In this paper we ask: Did Indian interwar protection hurt UK manufacturers, by raising tariffs on manufactured imports? Or did it favour UK interests, by discriminating against “foreign” (i.e. non- British) producers? We answer this question by quantifying the impact of trade policy on the value and composition of Indian imports, using novel disaggregated data on both trade policies and imports for 114 commodity categories coming from 42 countries. Indian trade elasticities were generally larger than those in the United Kingdom at the same time. We find that even though Indian protection lowered total imports, it substantially boosted imports from the UK. Trade policy had a big impact on trade flows.
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