4.4 Article

Effects of the comprehensive and progressive agreement for trans-pacific partnership

Journal

WORLD ECONOMY
Volume 44, Issue 5, Pages 1312-1337

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/twec.13026

Keywords

Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership; effects; numerical general equilibrium; trade cost

Funding

  1. SSHRC Internal Research Grant
  2. Chinese Ministry of Education for Philosophy and Social Sciences [19JHQ062]

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Most member countries benefit from trade integration, while non-member countries suffer losses. The entry of the US, China, India and the EU increases benefits for member countries and decreases losses for non-member countries. The US withdrawal has negative effects, but the world as a whole gains from the trade deal.
This paper uses a numerical multi-country and multi-sector general equilibrium model with endogenous trade imbalance and trade cost to simulate the effects of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and its future member expansion. Simulation results show that most member countries will benefit from trade integration and that most non-member countries will lose due to the exclusion effects of the regional trade agreement, but effects for specific countries differ. The entry of the US, China, India and the EU to the CPTPP will significantly increase member countries' benefits, and their entry will decrease the losses of non-member countries. The US withdrawal from the CPTPP has a negative effect on the US, which will increase as more countries join. The world as a whole will gain from the trade deal.

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