Disciplining trade finance: the OECD Export Credit Arrangement
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in International Organization
- Vol. 43 (1) , 173-205
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020818300004598
Abstract
The salience of tariffs, quotas, and other import restrictions in current discussions of trade policy obscures what may well become a more significant form of government intervention: subsidized export promotion. Over the past two decades, subsidized trade finance has been one of the most widely used instruments of export promotion. This article offers an historical description and a theoretical explanation for the success of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Export Credit Arrangement, an international regime restricting the provision of subsidized trade finance. The explanation emphasizes three factors: the structure of government institutions, the relative power of states, and the functional value of information. More generally, the analysis demonstrates the inherent weaknesses of monocausal explanations of international cooperation and the advantages of explanations based on a conception of international cooperation as a multistage, process, each stage of which may be explained by a separate theory.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ideas, institutions, and American trade policyInternational Organization, 1988
- The control of export credit subsidies and its welfare consequencesJournal of International Economics, 1987
- The OECD ‘Consensus’ on Export CreditsThe World Economy, 1986
- The Political Economy of Trade: Institutions of ProtectionAmerican Political Science Review, 1986
- The limitations of “structural” theories of commercial policyInternational Organization, 1986
- The irony of state strength: comparative responses to the oil shocks in the 1970sInternational Organization, 1986
- The limits of hegemonic stability theoryInternational Organization, 1985
- Byatt Report on Subsidies to British Export CreditsThe World Economy, 1984
- Noncooperative Collusion under Imperfect Price InformationEconometrica, 1984
- Hegemonic stability theory and 19th century tariff levels in EuropeInternational Organization, 1983