Immiserizing Foreign Aid [electronic resource] : The Roles of Tariffs and Nontraded Goods / Stephen Tokarick.

By: Tokarick, StephenMaterial type: TextTextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 06/129Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2006Description: 1 online resource (17 p.)ISBN: 1451863896 :ISSN: 1018-5941Subject(s): Equation | Factor Endowments | Imported Good | Nontraded Goods | Trade Theory | Welfare EffectsAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Immiserizing Foreign Aid : The Roles of Tariffs and Nontraded GoodsOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: International trade theory has pointed out that factor accumulation could immiserize a country if it is sufficiently biased toward the export sector, or if it is biased toward an importcompeting sector in the presence of tariff protection. This paper analyzes the impact of aid, in the form of an increase in the capital stock used only in the nontraded sector, on real income. Yano and Nugent (1999) discussed this issue, but their analysis turned out to be incorrect. This paper demonstrates that whether aid in the form of an increase in capital specific to the nontraded sector reduces welfare depends on how aid affects the price of the nontraded good and on whether imports and the nontraded good are substitutes or complements in demand.
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International trade theory has pointed out that factor accumulation could immiserize a country if it is sufficiently biased toward the export sector, or if it is biased toward an importcompeting sector in the presence of tariff protection. This paper analyzes the impact of aid, in the form of an increase in the capital stock used only in the nontraded sector, on real income. Yano and Nugent (1999) discussed this issue, but their analysis turned out to be incorrect. This paper demonstrates that whether aid in the form of an increase in capital specific to the nontraded sector reduces welfare depends on how aid affects the price of the nontraded good and on whether imports and the nontraded good are substitutes or complements in demand.

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