Tabakis, C., "Are Nationalist Countries More Protectionist?"

March 31, 2022

Title: "Are Nationalist Countries More Protectionist?"

Speaker: Professor Chrysostomos Tabakis, School of Public Policy and Management, Korea Development Institute (KDI)

Host: Professor Panagiotis Hatzipanayotou, Department of International & European Economic Studies, Athens University of Economics and Business

Time: 15.30-17.00

Room: A36

Attachments: PDF icon PDF of Relevant Paper

Abstact: We investigate the implications of consumer nationalism for multilateral trade cooperation. Perhaps surprisingly, we show that countries with relatively more nationalist consumers can sustain relatively more liberal trade policies in a repeated-game setting. Moreover, the most cooperative equilibrium tariff of a sufficiently impatient (patient) country is decreasing (increasing) in the level of its consumers’ nationalism. Thus, asymmetric consumer nationalism across countries has a less pronounced anti-cooperation effect, if at all, on the incentives of countries with relatively more nationalist consumers, rather than vice versa. We take these predictions to an antidumping–nationalism dataset and find empirical evidence in their support.

Date: 
31/03/2022 - 15:30 to 17:00