Trade promotion (international trade)

Trade promotion (sometimes referred to as export promotion) is an umbrella term for economic policies, development interventions and private initiatives aimed at improving the trade performance of an economic area. Such an economic area can include just one country, a region within a country, or a group of countries involved in an economic trade area. Specific industries may be targeted. Improvement is mainly sought by increasing exports both in absolute terms and relative to imports. When specific industries are targeted, trade promotion policies tend to target industries that have a comparative advantage over their foreign competitors. Trade promotion can also include expanding the supply of key inputs in a country's strongest industries, via import expansion. If successful, such a tactic would lead to pro-trade biased growth.[1]

As an economic policy with the ultimate goal of increasing domestic welfare, trade promotion comprises a large set of policy instruments. One notable tactic is the provision of trade intelligence to domestic enterprises in order to reduce transaction costs and provide them with a competitive advantage vis-à-vis foreign companies. Many countries all over the world have set up special agencies, most of them in the public domain, to implement trade promotion policies and provide support services to domestic enterprises.[2]

Some international organizations provide assistance to so-called developing countries to help them promote their exports, most prominently the International Trade Centre in Geneva, which is a subsidiary of the World Trade Organization and the United Nations with a mandate to providing trade-related technical assistance to those countries.[3][4]

  1. ^ Gandolfo, Giancarlo, 1986. "International Trade and Economic Growth", pp. 164-214.
  2. ^ Daniel Lederman, Marcelo Olarreaga and Lucy Payton 2007, Export Promotion Agencies: Do They Work?, Journal of Development Economics, 91 (2), pp. 257-265.
  3. ^ International Trade Centre. Mission Statement
  4. ^ Global Trade-Related Technical Assistance Database (GTAD), an agency of the World Trade Organization