Arguments For and Against Protection
Arguments For and Against Protection
Trade
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In this article we will discuss about the arguments for and against protection.
The economists at different times put forward different arguments to justify he policy of
protection. Some of the arguments are, however, proved to be fallacious and so cannot be
accepted. There are some other arguments which prove to be good and so these are widely
accepted.
1. Infant Industries:
Many developing countries, like India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have the conditions
necessary to compete successfully in the international market, but they lack experience and
expertise which take time to acquire.
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The infant industry argument suggests that new industries should be given temporary protection
in order to enable them to build up this experience. This argument applies where the industry is
small and young, and where costs are high but fall as the industry grows.
According to this argument, there are some industries in which a country would really have
comparative advantages if and only if it could get them started. If faced with foreign
competition, such infant (young and growing) industries would not be able to pass the initial
period of experiment and financial stresses.
But given protection for a short period, they can be expected to develop economies of mass
production and they would ultimately be able to face foreign competition without protection. So,
at the infant stage such industries should be protected for a period till they can face competition
independently.
The central idea of this argument is embodied in the saying- Nurse the baby, protect the child,
and free the adult’. This argument s now widely accepted in India as a good ground of protection
for a temporary period for promoting home industries at the early stages.
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Critics, however, argue that most infant industries never grow up- that they continue to demand
protection; so their customers continue to pay high prices. Once protection is given to such
industries, it is a practice (mainly for political reasons), to remove it.
3. Employment Protection:
The dynamics of the world economy mean that at any time some industries will be in decline. If
those industries were responsible for a significant amount of employment in a country in the
past, their decline would cause problems of regional unemployment. There s justification for a
country to protect a contracting industry to slow down its rate of decline so that time is given for
people to find jobs elsewhere in the economy.
4. Employment Creation:
Protection to home industries may create employment opportunities in the country, and thus
reduce the magnitude of unemployment. But this argument is also fallacious; for protection may
create employment in some home industries, but by reducing imports it reduces employment
opportunities in the foreign countries.
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So, such a beggar-my-neighbour high-tariff policy might create employment in the short run only
before other nations retaliate. Protection can of course increase employment in another way. By
improving the balance of trade it can increase employment and income provided the other
countries do no retaliate. But even this argument is not convincing as protection cannot maintain
high employment indefinitely through export surplus.
5. Balance of Trade:
Some countries experience imbalance in their trade with the rest of the world. If they are
importing too many goods they may correct a temporary problem by imposing tariffs on imports.
A suitable tariff policy can create and maintain a favourable balance of trade.
The restrictions on imports for the purpose of protection will create a surplus in the balance of
trade of the country. But this argument is wrong. If all countries simultaneously follow this
policy, none would find foreign buyers for the sale of goods and so none would gain. However,
Sir Arthur Lewis has put forward a counter argument here.
As he says: “National income cannot be increased by adding imports, since this would
result only in diverting resources to the production of articles of domestic consumption,
thereby with drawing them from the most profitable export markets. Nor can domestic
employment be increased by reducing imports because this would reduce exports to the
same extent”.
Protection of home industries is necessary to resist such a policy. It refers to the selling of
products on overseas markets at prices below those prevailing on domestic markets. The danger
here is that the dumping of products could cause prices to drop drastically.
This could benefit the consumers in the short run. But, in the long run, domestic producers could
be forced out of business making room for the foreign suppliers in the future. Producers may be
off-loading products on foreign markets to keep prices up in their home markets. The price of a
Japanese camera, for example, is higher in Tokyo than in New York. Therefore, the effects of
dumping are undesirable and, if it can be detected, some protection against its adverse effects is
justified.
Countries can improve their position when they are the sole (or dominant) buyer of a commodity.
This is rare, but if American importers of tea agreed with one another to restrict imports’ then the
world price would fall. Of course, this would lower the incomes received by the producers of tea
and so might be thought undesirable as they are mostly poor countries.
8. Retaliation:
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Often countries follow a policy of protectionism against unfair foreign competition. ‘Unfair’
competition can take a variety of forms. Sometimes, foreign governments can subsidise their
export industries. This means that domestic industries cannot compete fairly.
Similarly, foreign firms may ‘dump’ their products overseas, either because they cannot be sold
on their domestic market, or in order to destroy competitor. They could then increase their prices
and make large profit Countries also require protection against low-cost imports.
It is often argued that declining industries need a period of protection in order to allow the
decline to take place gradually, so that workers can retrain as new industries develop. A variation
of this approach says that industries in high wage countries should have protection against goods
made by low-paid labour.
This, of course, denies the advantages of comparative advantage which derive from lower- costs.
Instead, the argument is that if foreign firms pay low wages, this is a form of unfair competition
and domestic firms should be protected. This would safeguard the position of domestic workers
Critics, however, argue that this would, in fact, reduce the wages of workers in poor countries
and make consumers of rich countries pay higher prices.
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Protecting an industry against ‘unfair’ competition is also questionable countries often will claim
that competition is unfair when, in fact, a country may just be using its comparative advantage to
lower costs.
This argument is used against some of the low-wage economies and the difficult issue is to
decide whether wages are low due to the abundance of labour as a factor of production or
whether exploitation is present. If the latter is the case, protection may not be the answer to the
problem.
Fallacious Arguments:
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According to Abraham Lincon, protection prevents the purchase of foreign goods and thereby
keeps money at home. But this argument loses much of its weight when we observe that owing
to protection the people of the country are to pay higher prices for home-produced goods.
It is argued by Henry Clay and other American protectionists that the restriction on the imports
of foreign goods will create a wide domestic market for the products of the home industries. But
this argument is also fallacious because protection, by curtailing imports, will reduce exports’
too. It is true that home industries will lose the foreign markets if the same policy is pursued by
foreigners.
3. National Defence Argument:
Industries which are essential for the defence (e.g., arms and ammunitions, military equipment,
etc.) of the country are to be protected to preserve the national independence of a country. The
policy of discriminating protection as adopted in India also in 1949-50 prescribed protection for
defence industries at any cost.
Protection is also advocated to attain self-sufficiency in essential goods. The industries which are
essential for national self-sufficiency are to be protected. This is really a convincing argument
for protection in developing countries like India. In fact, national interest is the sole criterion for
granting protection to industries in such countries.
(a) It creates obstacles or barriers to free multinational trade. Due to high tariffs imposed by
other countries, a country is not allowed to produce goods in which it has cost advantages. So,
protection reduces world production and consumption of internationally traded goods,
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(b) Owing to higher tariff on imports, the consumers are compelled to buy home goods, often of
inferior quality and often at higher prices,
(c) Protection gives shelter to weak home industries. If it is permanent, home industries would
not get any incentive to compete freely with their foreign counterparts. There would be need for
continuation of protection for an indefinite period,
(d) Protection may lead to trade wars and international conflicts among trading nations,
(e) Protection give rise to such abuse as ‘wire-pulling’ in political quarters, vested interest in the
protected sector, etc.
Conclusion:
Although protection has some disadvantages, the developing countries like India can follow the
policy of protection at the early stages of industrial revaluation. The ultimate object should be to
accelerate the rate of economic growth and the pace of development.
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According to Alan S. Blinder, the case against protectionism, described as a negative-sum game,
where the losing consumers lose more than the winning protected producers win, involves even
more problems. There are four other problems with trade restrictions.
First, protectionism allows high-cost producers that would otherwise fail to survive. Second,
trade restrictions have a habit of affecting other industries. For example, automobiles need
protection because the ball bearings, steel and textiles that provide inputs to automobiles are
protected.
Third, foreign nations often retaliate against protectionism. Tit-for-tat is the modus operandi in
international trade: Country A raises barriers on product X because Country B did it to product
Y. Fourth, trade restrictions are not really job-saving or job-creating, but job-swapping.
Protectionism raises the exchange rate, hurting exports in unprotected industries. Because in the
long run the value of exports must be equal to the value of imports, we end up exchanging the
products of inefficient unprotected industries for those inefficient protected industries.
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