The impact of trade reforms and the multi-fibre arrangement on Indonesian clothing and textile exports in the 1980s
Date
1992
Authors
Saad, Ilyas
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Abstract
This study analyses how macroec.onomic and trade reforms and
government assistance made it possibl, for Indonesia to become a major
exporter of clothing and textiles in the 1980s. It analyses the impact
the removal of the MFA quotas would have on Indonesian clothing and
textile exports.
The collapse of petroleum prices in
dominance of petroleum exports in the
the early 1980s ended the
Indonesian economy. The
macroeconomic and foreign trade regimes, however, had to be reformed
to enable non-petroleum manufactured products to become an alternative
source of export revenues.
The reforms succeeded in reducing the domestic inflation rate,
reducing the level of protection on imports and devaluing the real
exchange rate. 'True protection' and 'true subsidy' indicate that the
reforms shifted policy biases from import-substitution to promoting
exportables.
Exporters were also supported by duty exemptions and drawback
facilities provided by the new trade regime. These were found to be
critical sources of the effective rate of assistance to exporters. The
effective rate of assistance for exports became higher than assistance
for domestic sales.
The low cost of labour in Indonesia was an important source of
competitiveness for labour-intensive exports from Indonesia.
The demand for Indonesian clothing and textile exports has been
affected by the Multi- fibre Arrangement (MFA). MFA restrictions on
established exporters, notably Hong Kong, the Republic of Korea, and
Taiwan, enabled Indonesian clothing and textile exports to enter MFA
markets in the early stages of Indonesia's export growth for these
products. In the mid-1980s, however, as quotas began to be binding on
Indonesia, the MFA become a constraint on Indonesian clothing textile
exports.
With negotiations in the Uruguay Round taking place, most likely
to phase out the MFA in early the 2000s, a multi-country trade model
was developed to estimate the impact of the removal of the MFA on
world clothing exports in 1988. The results show that world clothing
exports would increase markedly if the MFA were phased out. Clothing
producers in all MFA exporting countries, including Indonesia, would gain
if the MFA were removed.
The producers in Indonesia would receive a welfare gain of about
US$48 million after an MFA rent loss of as muc h as US$80 million.
This results from an increase in total exports from Indonesia of US$208
million (27 per cent of total exports from Indonesia) if the MFA were
removed. In addition, the removal of the MFA would also increase the
producers export capacity and efficiency as the 'quota market' and
resulting rent seeking activities were removed.
Consumers in MFA importing countries would gain more than
producers in those countries. The principal group that would be less well
off would be consumers in non-MFA countries who would suffer a small
loss with the removal of the MFA.
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