Publication | Closed Access
Removing Distortions in the U.S. Ethanol Market: What Does It Imply for the United States and Brazil?
150
Citations
21
References
2008
Year
TradeAgricultural EconomicsLawCommodity MarketUnited StatesEnergy TaxationU.s. Trade BarriersTax CreditEconomic AnalysisCommercial PolicyTax PolicyFederal Tax CreditInternational TaxationEconomicsTrade PatternU.s. Ethanol MarketRegulatory EconomicsMarketingFinanceTrade LiberalizationFederal Income TaxTrade PolicyFederal TaxEconomic PolicyProtectionismBusinessMarket Power
Abstract We analyze the impact of trade liberalization and removal of the federal tax credit in the United States on ethanol markets using a multimarket international ethanol model. We find that U.S. trade barriers have been effective in protecting the ethanol industry. Under current policy, there is separability of the U.S. ethanol market from world markets. With trade liberalization, the ethanol market deepens, making it less susceptible to price volatility. The effect of trade liberalization extends beyond ethanol markets, affecting agricultural markets. The results show that the impact of removal of the tax credit overrides the impact of the tariff removal.
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