User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
tariffs p- Plural of tariff
Extensive Definition
- For other uses of this word, see tariff (disambiguation).
Tariffs may be of various kinds:
- An ad valorem tariff is a set percentage of the value of the good that is being imported. Sometimes these are problematic as when the international price of a good falls, so does the tariff, and domestic industries become more vulnerable to competition. Conversely when the price of a good rises on the international market so does the tariff, but a country is often less interested in protection when the price is higher. They also face the problem of inappropriate transfer pricing where a company declares a value for goods being traded which differs from the market price, aimed at reducing overall taxes due.
- A specific tariff is a tariff of a specific amount of money that does not vary with the price of the good. These tariffs may be harder to decide the amount at which to set them, and they may need to be updated due to changes in the market or inflation.
- A "revenue tariff" is a set of rates designed primarily to raise money for the government. A tariff on coffee imports, for example (imposed by countries where coffee cannot be grown) raises a steady flow of revenue.
- A "protective tariff" is intended to artificially inflate prices of imports and "protect" domestic industries from foreign competition (see also effective rate of protection). For example, a 50% tax on an imported machine raises the price from $100 to $150. Without a tariff, the local manufacturers could only charge $100 for the same machine; now they can charge $149 and make the sale.
- A "prohibitive tariff" is one so high that no one imports any of that item.
Tax,
tariff and trade rules in modern times are usually set together
because of their common impact on industrial
policy, investment
policy, and agricultural
policy. A trade bloc is
a group of allied countries agreeing to minimize or eliminate
tariffs against trade with each other, and possibly to impose
protective tariffs on imports from outside the bloc. A customs
union has a common external tariff, and, according to an agreed
formula, the participating countries share the revenues from
tariffs on goods entering the customs union.
If a country's major industries lose to foreign
competition, the loss of jobs and tax revenue can severely impair
parts of that country's economy. Protective tariffs have been used
as a measure against this possibility. However, protective tariffs
have disadvantages as well. The most notable is that they increase
the price of the good subject to the tariff, disadvantaging
consumers of that good or manufacturers who use that good to
produce something else: for example a tariff on food can increase
poverty, while a tariff
on steel can make automobile manufacture less competitive. They can
also backfire if countries whose trade is disadvantaged by the
tariff impose tariffs of their own, resulting in a trade war and,
according to free trade theorists, disadvantaging both sides.
Adherents of supply-side
economics sometimes refer to domestic taxes, such as income
taxes, as being a "tariff" affecting inter-household trade.
Economic analysis
Some economic theories hold that
tariffs are a harmful interference with the individual freedom
and the laws of the free market.
They believe that it is unfair toward consumers and generally
disadvantageous for a country to artificially maintain an
inefficient industry, and that it is better to allow it to collapse
and to allow a new one to develop in its place. The opposition to
all tariffs is part of the free trade
principle; the World
Trade Organization aims to reduce tariffs and to avoid
countries discriminating between other countries when applying
tariffs. In the following graph we see the effect that an import
tariff has on the domestic economy. In a closed economy without
trade we would see equilibrium
at the intersection of the demand and supply curves (point B),
yielding prices of $70 and an output of Y*. In this case the
consumer
surplus would be equal to the area inside points A, B and K,
while producer
surplus is given as the area A, B and L. When incorporating
free international trade into the model we introduce a new supply
curve denoted as SW. This curve makes the assumption that the
international supply of the good or service is perfectly
elastic and that the world can produce at a near infinite
quantity at the given price. Obviously, in real world conditions
this is somewhat unrealistic, but making such assumptions is
unlikely to have a material impact on the outcome of the model. In
this case the international price of the good is $50 ($20 less than
the domestic equilibrium price).
The model above is only completely accurate in
the extreme case where none of the consumers belong to the
producers group and the cost of the product is a fraction of their
wages. If instead, we take the opposite extreme, and assume all
consumers come from the producers group, and also assume their only
purchasing power comes from the wages earned in production and the
product costs their whole wage, then the graph looks radically
different. Without tariffs, only those producers/consumers able to
produce the product at the world price will have the money to
purchase it at that price. The small FGL triangle will be matched
by an equally small mirror image triangle of consumers still able
to buy. With tariffs, a larger CDL triangle and its mirror will
survive.
Note also, that with or without tariffs, there is
no incentive to buy the imported goods over the domestic, as the
price of each is the same. Only by altering available purchasing
power through debt, selling off assets, or new wages from new forms
of domestic production, will the imported goods be purchased. Or,
of course, if its price were only a fraction of wages.
In the real world, as more imports replace
domestic goods, they consume a larger fraction of available
domestic wages, moving the graph towards this view of the model. If
new forms of production are not found in time, the nation will go
bankrupt, and internal political pressures will lead to debt
default, extreme tariffs, or worse.
Moderate tariffs would slow down this process,
allowing more time for new forms of production to be
developed.
Infant industry argument
Some proponents of protectionism claim that imposing tariffs that help protect newly founded infant industries allows those domestic industries to grow and become self sufficient within the international economy once they reach a reasonable size.In a free market economic system, the tariff
establishes the borders or boundaries of the system, because as
defined by free market economics, the absence of tariffs is a
requirement of a free market economic system. The establishment of
tariffs create a border of protection around the free market
economy, and within that free market area, no tariffs can be
established.
The four requirements of a free market economic
system, as defined by Ludwig Von Mises, are private property, a
coercive government, the absence of institutional interferences
within the system, and the division of labor. You wish though
because this editing tariff may cause discrepancies among opposing
countries.
Political analysis
The tariff has been used as a political tool to
establish an independent nation; for example, the United States
Tariff
Act of 1789, signed specifically on July 4th, was called the
"Second Declaration of Independence" by newspapers because it was
intended to be the economic means to achieve the political goal of
a sovereign and independent United States.
In modern times, the political impact of tariffs
has been seen in a positive and negative sense. The
2002 United States steel tariff imposed a 30% tariff on a
variety of imported steel products for a period of three years.
American steel producers supported the tariff, but the move was
criticised by the Cato
Institute.
Tariffs can occasionally emerge as a political
issue prior to an election. In the leadup to the
2007 Australian Federal election, the Australian
Labor Party announced it would undertake a review of Australian
car tarrifs if elected. The
Liberal Party made a similar commitment, while independent
candidate Nick
Xenophon announced his intention to introduce tariff-based
legislation as "a matter of urgency"
Revenue argument
Critics of free trade have argued that tariffs
are especially important to developing countries as a source of
revenue. Developing nations do not have the institutional capacity
to effectively levy income and sales taxes. In comparison with
other forms of taxation, tariffs are relatively easy to collect.
The trend of lifting tariffs and promoting free trade has been
argued to have had disproportionately negative effects on the
governments of developing nations who have greater difficulty than
developed nations in replacing tariffs as a revenue source.
References
- Dominick Salvatore, Introduction to International Economics (2004)
- Taussig, F.W. "Tariff," Encyclopedia Britannica (11th edition, 1911) vol 26 pp. 422-27.
- Free Markets And Tariffs
External links
- UN's ITC website for accessible tariff information
- India Import Tariff information
- An article from the SourceJuice website detailing essential information to help assist United States importers calculate duty rates for their goods. Site is complete with links to federal databases, guides and knowledge from industry insiders.
tariffs in Bulgarian: Митническа тарифа
tariffs in Catalan: aranzel
tariffs in Czech: Clo
tariffs in German: Zoll (Abgabe)
tariffs in Spanish: arancel
tariffs in French: Droit de douane
tariffs in Hebrew: מכס
tariffs in Hungarian: Vám
tariffs in Japanese: 関税
tariffs in Norwegian: Toll
tariffs in Urdu: ٹیرف
tariffs in Vietnamese: Thuế xuất nhập khẩu
tariffs in Chinese: 关税