The other trade war: Quantifying the Korea-Japan trade dispute

Monday, February 7, 2022

Edward Balistreri, Yeutter Institute

Sangho Shin, Bank of Korea

Abstract

In mid-2019 a new trade war between Korea and Japan started heating up, while the U.S.-China trade war held the spotlight. This paper documents the recent Korea-Japan trade dispute and quantifies its economic impacts. We consider a set of non-tariff distortions—Japanese export controls combined with Korean boycotts of Japanese goods. We simulate the impact of these actions using a multi-region general equilibrium model calibrated to the GTAP version 10 accounts and observed trade responses in the Korea Customs Service data. We find a welfare loss of 0.144% ($1.0 billion) for Korea and 0.013% ($346 million) for Japan. Sectoral impacts include a 0.25% reduction in chemical production in Japan. In Korea the reduction in imports from Japan is offset by increases in domestic production and imports from other countries.

Read the article

 

Edward Balistreri

Ed Balistreri

Balistreri is the Duane Acklie Chair at the Yeutter Institute and an economics professor in the College of Business at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. View biography.

Sangho Shin

Sangho Shin

Shin is an economist with the International Economics Team at the Bank of Korea and is a former PhD student under Balistreri. 

Opinions expressed are solely those of the author and not the Yeutter Institute or the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.