← Search

Negotiated Trade Restrictions with Private Political Pressure

Robert C. Feenstra; Tiffany R. Lewis

University of California, Davis

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1991

We consider a home government with political pressure to restrict trade. The foreign country is compensated with a portion of the tariff revenues or quota rents, but cannot directly observe the political pressure abroad. In this setting, the two countries negotiate over the volume of trade and transfer of rents, depending on the level of political pressure. We determine globally optimal, incentive-compatible trade policies, in which the home government has no incentive to overstate (or understate) the pressure for protection.

DOI
10.2307/2937965
Volume
106 (4)
Pages
1287-1307
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref