Governance, Corruption, and Trade in the Asia Pacific Region

This paper examines the impact of reducing corruption and improving transparency to lower trade costs in the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation region. The authors find, based on a computable general equilibrium model, significant potential trade and welfare gains for Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation members, with increased transparency and lower levels of corruption. Results suggest that trade in the region would increase by 11 percent and global welfare would expand by $406 billion by raising transparency to the average in the region. Most of the increase in welfare would take place in membe... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Abe, Kazutomo
Wilson, John S.
Erscheinungsdatum: 2008
Verlag/Hrsg.: World Bank
Washington
DC
Schlagwörter: ADJUSTMENT MECHANISM / AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS / APPLIED TARIFF / AVERAGE COSTS / BASE YEAR / BILATERAL TARIFF / BILATERAL TRADE / CAPITAL FLOWS / CAPITAL STOCK / CHANGES IN TRADE / COMMODITIES / COMMODITY / COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES / COMPETITIVENESS / CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE / CONSUMERS / COST REDUCTION / COST REDUCTIONS / CUSTOMS / CUSTOMS ADMINISTRATION / CUSTOMS CLEARANCE / CUSTOMS CLEARANCE PROCEDURES / DEVELOPING ECONOMIES / DISTORTION / DISTRIBUTION COSTS / DOLLAR VALUE / DOMESTIC GOODS / DOMESTIC MARKET / DOMESTIC PRICE / DOMESTIC PRODUCTION / DUMMY VARIABLE / DUMMY VARIABLES / DUTCH DISEASE / ECONOMETRIC ESTIMATES / ECONOMIC COOPERATION / ECONOMIC GROWTH / ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS / ECONOMIC REFORM / ELASTICITY / ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION / EQUILIBRIUM / ERROR TERM / ERROR TERMS / EXOGENOUS SHOCK / EXOGENOUS VARIABLE / EXOGENOUS VARIABLES / EXPLANATORY VARIABLES / EXPORT INDUSTRIES / EXPORT MARKETS / EXPORT PRICE
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29048912
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/10986/6961

This paper examines the impact of reducing corruption and improving transparency to lower trade costs in the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation region. The authors find, based on a computable general equilibrium model, significant potential trade and welfare gains for Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation members, with increased transparency and lower levels of corruption. Results suggest that trade in the region would increase by 11 percent and global welfare would expand by $406 billion by raising transparency to the average in the region. Most of the increase in welfare would take place in member economies undertaking reform. Among the reformers, the gross domestic product of Vietnam, Thailand, Russia, and the Philippines would increase approximately 20 percent. The benefits to Malaysia and China would also be substantial with increased transparency and lower levels of corruption.