sps barriers as a bridge to cross
TRANSCRIPT
This research assesses the effects of aflatoxins standards - (SPS) standards by introducing a new concept, bridge to cross (BTC).
The BTC is the regulatory gap between the exporting and importing countries.
The gap is what needs to be bridged to access markets
Implies same standard means different things to different exporters- the standard is an effective barrier only when it exceeds the standard in the domestic market of the exporting country.
“. . . a World Bank study has calculated that the European Union regulation on aflatoxins costs Africa $750 million each year in exports of cereals, dried fruit and nuts. And what does it achieve? It may possibly save the life of one citizen of the European Union every two years . . . Surely a more reasonable balance can be found”.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan at the Third United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries , May 2001
10 years down the line the nose dive should have happened. It has not – why?
Methods Always remember that aflatoxins is one problem out of many Theoretically the model was mis-specified because
▪ Trade barriers have to be included as a multi-lateral term (Australia and New Zealand trade a lot with each other not only because they are near to each other but also because they are so far away from the Rest of the world)
▪ Zero trade is information , ignoring it gives wrong estimates ▪ They included very few explanatory variables
Coverage Trade only within a selected group of countries Valid to answer questions related to trade effects on a
particular trading relationship ▪ Not valid for quantifying the trade losses in numbers because of
market reallocation
The effect vanishes Other study also finds the same thing
Xiong and Beghin (2010) from Iowa state university
Does it means that aflatoxins regulations do not matter
Our argument is that it matters but in a different way
It matters as a bridge to cross
BTC (Bridge to cross): the difference between importing country standard and exporting country standard.
Where there is a regulatory gap – the difference between the importing standard and exporting standard is important
If a country has high contamination, it has a tougher job in achieving either standard – the BTC is high
We find using the BTC, aflatoxins regulations matter when the average size of farms is smaller in a country
Where no domestic standards, the BTC is the difference between actual contamination and importing standards
If contamination levels are low, countries could export- i.e. there is a smaller bridge to cross
Bridges are long for many countries Domestic markets
Raise the speed on the bridge
Cushion the fall
In groundnut we continue work to look at BTC as regulation contamination gap.
In maize a 10% increase in BTC reduces 0.9% in trade globally, 1.4% among poor countries and by 2.5% in African country sample for countries with small landholdings
Though not explicitly stated aflacontrol project aims to bring down the level of btc.
Even if Otsuki et al (2001 figures are believed, changing regulation is a hard nut to crack
Reducing domestic contamination and improving domestic standards are actionable measures
Non trading pairs more important in groundnuts
Bridge to cross in groundnuts comparatively longer for African and poor countries
Regulation is a variable hard to alter In that case effort will pay off best (in trade)
by reducing contamination – also see improvements in health
Most countries do not export because bridges, are far too long - especially where no domestic standards exist
Bridge to cross should be a key factor in explaining zero trade.
Data a significant problem Collected based on internet searches and
grey literature A highly labor intensive process that runs the
risk of not being exhaustive, representative or imperfectly matching