Reports
Discussion Papers
No.953 A Theoretical Perspective on the Economic Effects of U.S.–China Trade Disputes
by Hiroshi Mukunoki
March 2025
ABSTRACT
This study examines the economic effects of U.S.–China trade disputes from a theoretical perspective, focusing on tariffs, trade policy uncertainty, relocation to third countries, and export restrictions. Since 2018, the U.S. and China have imposed additional tariffs and other restrictive trade measures, significantly impacting global trade dynamics. This study surveys the existing literature and develops theoretical models to evaluate the consequences of these actions. First, it analyzes the welfare effects of tariffs, emphasizing the role of tariff pass-through and trade policy uncertainty. Empirical evidence indicates a near-complete tariff pass-through, suggesting that U.S. tariffs have increased costs for domestic consumers, while offering limited protection for domestic producers. Second, this study employs a Melitz-type model to explore firm relocation patterns, showing that medium-productivity firms tend to shift production to third countries. Finally, the study investigates the effects of export restrictions and proposes a quality-sorting model to evaluate the impacts of a “maximum quality ceiling” on export products. The results indicate that such restrictions discourage R&D investments, lower product quality, and lead to resource misallocation, harming economic efficiency.
Keywords: U.S.–China Trade Disputes, Tariff Pass-Through, Firm Relocation, Maximum Quality Ceiling
JEL classification: F13, F23, F51
PDF available at https://hdl.handle.net/2344/0002001291
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