Abstract
This paper is the first to examine the welfare impact of two tariff regimes when firms’ entry mode is endogenously determined via export or foreign direct investment (FDI) under a three-country, two-firm model. First, both uniform and discriminatory tariffs reveal an asymmetrical entry mode, where the high (low)-cost firm prefers export (FDI) and vice versa. Second, if both high and low-cost firms choose export under uniform tariffs but the high (low)-cost firm chooses export (FDI) under discriminatory tariffs, the importing country prefers uniform tariffs, and global welfare is higher with uniform tariffs. Third, if the high (low)-cost firm chooses FDI (export) under uniform tariffs but export (FDI) under discriminatory tariffs, the importing country prefers uniform tariffs, and global welfare is greater with discriminatory tariffs.
Appendix A: Comparison of Tariff Rates Under Different Tariff Regimes
Firstly, compare the tariff rates under different firms’ entry modes under a uniform tariff regime. Based on (4b), (5b), and (6b), we obtain the following.
Combining equations (1-1)–(1-3), it is evident that when 0 < c 1 < 14/43, t Uef < t Ufe < t Uee ; whereas when 14/43 < c 1 < 2/5, t Uef < t Uee < t Ufe .
Next, under a discriminatory tariff regime, compare the tariff rates under different firms’ entry modes. Based on (3b), (5b), and (6b), we obtain the following.
Combining equations (2-1)–(2-3), it can be known that when 0 < c
1 < 14/65,
Finally, the optimal tariff differences are compared under a uniform and discriminatory tariff when firms adopt the (Export, Export) entry mode.
From Equation (3-1), it is known that
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Supplementary Material
This article contains supplementary material (https://doi.org/10.1515/bejeap-2025-0114).
© 2025 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Payment for Environmental Services and Environmental Tax Under Imperfect Competition
- Disclosure of R&D Knowledge with Cross-Ownership in a Mixed Duopoly
- Optimal Tariffs with Endogenous Entry Mode: Uniform Versus Discriminatory Tariffs
- What Happens When We Become Age 18? SNAP Work Requirement and SNAP Participation
- Hiring Subsidies for Low-Educated Unemployed Youths are Ineffective in a Tight Labor Market
- The Impact of Medical Cannabis Laws on Commercial Health Insurer Individual Market Premiums, Claims, and Profitability
- Addictive Treatment
- Complement or Substitute? Punishment and Self-Interested Enforcement
- Gender Gaps in Different Assessment Systems: The Role of Teacher Gender
- Hiring Biased Managers: Kant vs. Nash
- College Expansion and Heterogeneous College Premiums: Evidence from the Marginal Treatment Effect in China
- The Effects of Hiring Credits on Firms’ Dynamics: A Synthetic Difference-in-Differences Evaluation
- Letter
- Environmental Taxes Versus Subsidies with Unionized Labor Markets. A Note on the Role of Wage Setting Structure