Assessing the Price-Raising Effect of Non-Tariff Measures in Africa
Assessing the Price-Raising Effect of Non-Tariff Measures in Africa
In spite of widespread tariff reductions, intra-African borders remain ‘thick’. Regional trade is inhibited by inadequate transportation infrastructure but also by various non-tariff measures (NTMs). This paper combines price data from the World Bank's International Comparison Project with a new database on NTMs to estimate their effect on consumer prices for selected consumption products. Results based on panel regressions on 1,260 country-product pairs suggest that, after controlling for tariffs, systematic cross-country cost-of-living differences, and product-specific unobservables, sanitary and phytosanitary measures contribute to raise the price of African foodstuffs by 14%. At the product level, rice and other cereals, some types of meat (e.g. poultry) and edible oils tend to fetch high ad-valorem equivalents. Combining our estimates with data on household expenditure patterns from Kenya's household survey, we show that the effect is regressive, raising the cost of living by 9% for poor households.
CITATION: Cadot, Olivier. Assessing the Price-Raising Effect of Non-Tariff Measures in Africa . : Oxford University Press (OUP) , 2014. Journal of African Economies, Vol. 23, No. 4, August 2014, pp. 425-463 - Available at: https://library.au.int/assessing-price-raising-effect-non-tariff-measures-africa-10