Association of Southeast Asian Nations, People's Republic of China, and India Growth and the Rest of the World: The Role of Trade

Robert Z. Lawrence
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

i»?i»?This paper explores the impact of past and future growth in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)1 Since the mid-1990s, ACI growth has improved the non-oil terms of trade of the developed countries. There have also been strong complementarities between ACI suppliers of intermediate inputs and PRC exports. More developed Asian countries have benefited from PRC capital goods demand. ACI growth has, however, put competitive pressures on other less-developed manufacturing exporters, worsening their terms of trade and constraining their pricing ability. ACI growth has been especially beneficial for oil and minerals commodity producers. On the other hand, net food importers and oil importing countries have been adversely affected by high import costs. , the People's Republic of China (PRC), and India—here referred to as the ACI countries—on aggregate welfare, relative wages, and global emissions in the rest of the world. It outlines several analytical frameworks, considers effects over the past decade and, based on consensus forecasts, the implications of that growth for the rest of the world in the decades to come. Future ACI growth provides opportunities and challenges for the rest of the world. For developed countries the opportunities are for selling high-end services and capital and consumer goods in the ACI markets and enjoying the benefits from intra-industry trade; the challenges will come from increased head-to-head competition in manufactured goods and services that should become more intense in future decades. For medium-income producers currently at between 30% and 60% of US levels, there will be a tougher tradeoff between more intensive competition with the PRC and serving the growing middle classes in ACI countries. For poorer countries, there will greater opportunities for becoming part of global supply chains in manufactured exports. Standard frameworks that assume internal factor mobility suggest continuing pressures for wage inequality in developed countries. But these hinge on the assumption that the ACI and developed countries will continue to produce similar products and that the ACI will specialize in unskilled labor-intensive products. In fact, as their exports become more technology—intensive and developed countries more specialized these pressures could be alleviated. On the one hand, as the “flying geese†process continues, exports from countries with lower incomes than the PRC are likely to displace PRC labor-intensive exports rather than domestic production in developed countries. On the other hand, while it may cause job loss and erode the returns to specific factors, PRC export growth is less likely to be a source of wage inequality in advanced economies.
东南亚国家联盟、中华人民共和国和印度经济增长与世界其他地区:贸易的作用
我»»? ?本文探讨了东南亚国家联盟(ASEAN)过去和未来增长的影响1自20世纪90年代中期以来,东盟的增长改善了发达国家的非石油贸易条件。ACI中间投入品供应商与中国出口产品之间也有很强的互补性。较发达的亚洲国家受益于中国对资本货物的需求。然而,亚太经合组织的增长给其他欠发达的制造业出口国带来了竞争压力,恶化了它们的贸易条件,限制了它们的定价能力。ACI的增长对石油和矿产商品生产国尤其有利。另一方面,粮食净进口国和石油进口国受到高进口成本的不利影响。在总福利、相对工资和全球排放量方面,美国、中华人民共和国(PRC)和印度(这里简称ACI国家)在世界其他地区的差距。它概述了几个分析框架,考虑了过去十年的影响,并基于共识预测,分析了这种增长在未来几十年对世界其他地区的影响。未来亚太经合组织的增长为世界其他地区提供了机遇和挑战。发达国家的机会是在亚太经合组织市场销售高端服务、资本和消费品,并享受产业内贸易的好处;挑战将来自制成品和服务领域日益激烈的竞争,这种竞争在未来几十年将变得更加激烈。对于目前处于美国水平30%至60%之间的中等收入生产商来说,在与中国更激烈的竞争和服务于ACI国家不断增长的中产阶级之间,将面临更艰难的权衡。对于较贫穷的国家来说,将有更大的机会成为制成品出口全球供应链的一部分。假设内部因素流动性的标准框架表明,发达国家工资不平等的压力持续存在。但这取决于这样一个假设,即ACI和发达国家将继续生产类似的产品,而ACI将专门生产非熟练劳动密集型产品。事实上,随着它们的出口变得更加技术密集型和发达国家更加专业化,这些压力可以得到缓解。一方面,随着€œflying geese过程的继续,来自收入低于中国的国家的出口可能会取代中国的劳动密集型出口,而不是发达国家的国内生产。另一方面,尽管中国出口增长可能导致失业并侵蚀特定因素的回报,但它不太可能成为发达经济体工资不平等的根源。
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