Learning to Use Trade Preferences: A Firm and Transaction Level Analysis of the EU-South Korea FTA

Jonas Kasteng, Ari Kokko*, Nils Norell, Patrik Tingvall

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

This article examines imports by Swedish firms and the utilization of the tariff preferences offered by the EU–South Korea Free Trade Agreement. To benefit from tariff preferences, the importer must make a formal request to use the preferences and also document the origin of the imported products (with a certificate of origin provided by the foreign exporter). This may be costly, and some importers choose to pay import tariffs even when tariff preferences are available. Hence, the preferences are not fully utilized. Using a detailed firm–transaction level data set on Swedish imports from South Korea, we analyse the determinants of preference utilization and how firms learn to use preferences. The results show that preference utilization is strongly correlated with potential duty savings, which depend on the preference margin and the size of the import transaction. From a learning perspective, we find that preference utilization is closely related to the number of import transactions undertaken by the firm, suggesting a learning-by-doing mechanism. The length of time the firm has been involved in importing activities plays a smaller role.
Original languageEnglish
JournalWorld Trade Review
Volume23
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)117-144
Number of pages28
ISSN1474-7456
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Published online: 23 January 2024.

Keywords

  • FTA
  • Tariff preference
  • Preference utilization
  • Imports
  • Learning
  • Transaction-level data

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