《Multi-lateral trade negotiations and the Most Favored》.pdf
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Journal of International Economics 57 (2002) 151–176
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Multi-lateral trade negotiations and the Most Favored
Nation clause
Phillip McCalman*
Department of Economics, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA
Received 9 November 1999; received in revised form 15 August 2000; accepted 15 January 2001
Abstract
This paper considers the interaction between private information and the Most Favored
Nation clause in trade negotiations. It demonstrates that by aggregating uncertainty over a
number of trading partners, the Most Favored Nation clause may offer a welfare
improvement over a set of bilateral trade negotiations. This improvement is shown to be
most pronounced when a large number of countries are involved in negotiations. 2002
Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords : Economic integration; Private information; Most Favored Nation
JEL classification : F13; F15
1. Introduction
The recent proliferation of preferential trade agreements (PTAs) has renewed
the debate over their desirability, especially in relation to efforts to liberalize at the
multi-lateral level. A number of papers have now documented the potentially
negative impact that PTAs may have on the multi-lateral process of trade
1
negotiations. However, one issue that has been neglected in this literature has
*Tel.: 1-831-459-4381; fax: 1-831-459-5077.
E-mail address: mccalman@ (P. McCalman).
1See Bhagwati and Panagariya (1996) for a recent survey, along with Levy (1997), Krishna (1998),
Bagwell and Staiger
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