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Abstract Though tariffs have declined in recent years, the number of applied non‐tariff measures (NTMs) in meat trade has expanded. We estimate the impacts of tariffs and NTMs (sanitary and phytosanitary SPS measures, technical barriers to trade TBTs, quantitative restrictions, and special safeguard measures) on beef, pork and poultry trade using a structural gravity model. Our baseline regression results show tariffs hinder trade, but SPS measures and TBTs on average expand trade for these three meat products. Using the estimates from our structural gravity model, we simulate the differential effects of declining tariffs versus proliferation of NTMs between 2003 and 2019. The simulation results show that tariff reductions during this period expanded global trade by a cumulative US466. 2 million for the three products, ceteris paribus. In contrast, growth in the number of NTMs caused global meat trade to rise by US8. 4 billion. Our findings thus suggest that the marked increase in the number of applied NTMs in recent decades has had a dramatically larger impact on global meat trade than tariff reductions.
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William Ridley
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Jeff Luckstead
Washington State University
Stephen Devadoss
Texas Tech University
Journal of Agricultural Economics
Washington State University
Texas Tech University
University of Illinois System
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Ridley et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e77c94b6db6435876f0fe2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-9552.12574