Trade and competition in Korean manufacturing
Abstract
The primary objective of this thesis is to examine the efficiency and welfare effects on
Korean manufacturing of an increase in competition from foreign firms. The Korean
case is of interest because it represents an experience with liberalisation of a protected
manufacturing sector in a small open economy. In the study, the imperfectly
competitive nature of Korea's manufacturing sector is explicitly incorporated into the
model.
The analysis focuses first on the effects of an increase in foreign competition on
domestic monopoly power, X-efficiency and national welfare. The market
concentration of Korean manufacturing industry remained high throughout the 1970s
and 1980s. The evidence suggests that financial subsidies to industry accelerated the
level of market concentration, and that protection, especially through import quotas,
was associated with high levels of X-inefficiency. The analysis also indicates that, in a
small open economy, a rise in foreign competition has positive welfare effects, even
when the economy is characterised by oligopoly and scale economies.
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