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Regulated Efficiency, World Trade Organization Accession, and the Motor Vehicle Sector in China
- Source :
- The World Bank Economic Review. 18:85-104
- Publication Year :
- 2004
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press (OUP), 2004.
-
Abstract
- This article is concerned with the interaction of regulated efficiency and World Trade Organization (WTO) accession and its impact on China's motor vehicle sector. The analysis is conducted using a 23 sector-25 region computable general equilibrium model. Regulatory reform and internal restructuring are found to be critical. Restructuring is represented by a cost reduction following from consolidation and rationalization that moves costs toward global norms. Without restructuring, WTO accession means a surge of final imports, though imports of parts could well fall as production moves offshore. However, with restructuring, the final assembly industry can be made competitive by world standards, with a strengthened position for the industry.
- Subjects :
- TRADE LIBERALIZATION
Computable general equilibrium
MARKET ACCESS
DOMESTIC PRODUCTION
CAPITAL FLOWS
INTERMEDIATE INPUTS
Market access
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM
VALUE ADDED
Regulatory reform
WORLD TRADE
Rationalization (economics)
MOTORCYCLES
MOST FAVORED NATION
Accession
ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION
GRAVITY ESTIMATES
Consolidation (business)
CAR COMPANIES
AUTOMOBILE PARTS
CHANGES IN TRADE
Economics
CARS
DOMESTIC MARKET
Free trade
GLOBAL INTEGRATION
TAXIS
TRADE NEGOTIATIONS
MOTOR VEHICLE INDUSTRY
QUOTAS
PASSENGER
CONSTANT ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION
CAR
PER CAPITA INCOME
FOREIGN PRODUCERS
EXPORT SHARES
FOREIGN COMPETITION
TARIFF REDUCTIONS
TRADE POLICY
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
DOMESTIC COMPETITION
MARGINAL COST
REGULATORY REGIMES
ABSENCE OF COMPETITION
INDUSTRIAL POLICIES
WELFARE GAINS
ENGINE
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
Development
PRODUCTION EFFICIENCY
AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY
VEHICLE MANUFACTURING
IMPORT SUBSTITUTION
INJURY
PURCHASING POWER
TRADE BARRIERS
IMPORT PROTECTION
Trade barrier
BUSES
WORLD PRICES
APPAREL
IMPORT QUOTAS
TRADE DEVELOPMENT
HIGH TARIFFS
ELASTICITY
INDUSTRIALIZATION
MOTOR VEHICLES
AUTOMOBILE PRODUCTION
FRAMEWORK
INCOME LEVELS
MOTOR CAR
MOTOR VEHICLE
FOREIGN PRODUCTION
TARIFF SCHEDULES
BARRIERS TO TRADE
IMPERFECT SUBSTITUTES
FREE TRADE AGREEMENT
VEHICLE PRODUCTION
AUTOMOBILE
MULTILATERAL TRADE
PROTECTIONISM
AGRICULTURE
STRUCTURES
FREE TRADE
GRAVITY EQUATION
International trade
WTO
IMPORT RESTRICTIONS
PASSENGER CARS
FOREIGN PRODUCER
TRANSPORTATION SERVICES
POLITICAL ECONOMY
ROADS
IMPORT SHARE
GLOBAL TRADE ANALYSIS
Commercial policy
EXPORTS
Multilateral trade negotiations
DOMESTIC INDUSTRY
GLOBAL TRADE
AIR
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL
INDUSTRIAL POLICY
METAL PRODUCTS
BENCHMARK
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
MARKET SEGMENTATION
MOTOR VEHICLE PRODUCTION
VEHICLES
RETAIL TRADE
ECONOMIC POLICIES
MULTILATERAL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS
TRADE FLOWS
EXPORT SHARE
Economics and Econometrics
AVERAGE TARIFF
GNP
Restructuring
ECONOMIC POLICY
TRANSPORT SERVICES
URUGUAY ROUND
EXPORT ORIENTATION
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
IMPORTS
IMPORT COMPETITION
AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY
FOREIGN SOURCES
MARKET SHARE
VEHICLE MANUFACTURERS
automobile sector
China accession to wto
Accounting
AUTO_INDUSTRY
AUTOMOBILES
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
China
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
AUTOMOTIVE SECTOR
TRUCKS
business.industry
STEEL
TRADE RESTRICTIONS
FOREIGN FIRMS
IMPERFECT COMPETITION
INCREASING RETURNS
jel:F13
INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION
jel:F14
Protectionism
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORTATION
jel:F17
FOREIGN COMPANIES
Position (finance)
PARKING
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
TARIFF RATES
COMPONENT PARTS
business
AUTO INDUSTRY
TARIFF SCHEDULE
Finance
China Accession to WTO
Automobile Sector
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1564698X
- Volume :
- 18
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The World Bank Economic Review
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....77f6a0a185fe58bb2a5e67988875335c
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhh034