An Empirical Investigation of the Determinants of Protectionism: A Case of Pakistan
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Published:2023-12-15
Issue:
Volume:
Page:21-35
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ISSN:1995-1272
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Container-title:FWU Journal of Social Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:FWU Journal
Abstract
Pakistan is among the most protectionist economies of the world and highly
protective trade regimes thus calls for an investigation of the determinants of this
protectionism. The current study intends to examine the macroeconomic
determinants of protectionism in the case of Pakistan employing the Granger
Causality test and Impulse Response Function covering a time period from 1988-
2018. The results of the Granger Causality test reveal that unemployment &
GDP Granger cause the tariff rate and there exists a unidirectional relationship
between these two variables with the tariff rate. Contrary to this, the tariff rate is
granger caused by the trade balance. Terms of the trade is found to have a
bidirectional association with the tariff rate, while there is no evidence of a causal
relationship between the tariff rate and inflation. The results of Impulse
Response functions reveal that an increase in unemployment and a higher TOT,
both are found to be positively associated with an increased level of
protectionism. However, a higher level of GDP or economic growth leads to
reduce the protectionism thereby reducing the tariff rate. The results of the study
are quite pertinent in identifying the core factors inducing a high level of
protectionism in Pakistan
Publisher
Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Women University Peshawar, Pakistan