1783. Trade Policy Options for Chile: A Quantitative Evaluation

Glenn W. Harrison, Thomas F. Rutherford, and David G. Tarr
(June 1997)

Welfare in Chile would be improved by moving toward uniformity in the value-added tax and lowering the Chilean tariff to between 6 and 8 percent.

Chile is currently evaluating a wide range of possible trade policies. Using a global computable general equilibrium model, Harrison, Rutherford, and Tarr examine a range of trade policy and complementary tax policy options for Chile.

They focus on Chile's principal preferential trade policy options: a free-trade area with MERCOSUR, a customs union with MERCOSUR, and a free trade area with NAFTA. They also examine such options as complementary tariff reduction with nonpartner countries in combination with implementing the free trade area options; unilateral or global trade liberalization; and the optimum unilateral tariff.

Their principal policy conclusions:

This model ignores dynamic gains from trade liberalization, the result of importing either a greater variety of products or more technologically advanced products.

This paper — a product of the International Trade Division, International Economics Department — is part of a larger effort in the department to examine the impact of regional trade integration in developing countries. Copies of the paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Jennifer Ngaine, room N5-060, telephone 202-473-7947, fax 202-522-1159, Internet address trade@worldbank.org. (76 pages)


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