1. Introduction
After China’s accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001, the scale of China’s foreign exports has developed rapidly, and exports have become a very important driving force for China’s rapid economic growth. In particular, the United States, as the world’s largest developed country, has naturally become a very important destination for Chinese goods and has long been ranked China’s largest export destination. In addition, China has also been the largest source country for U.S. imports in recent years, according to the Ministry of Commerce of the People’s Republic of China website: in 2017, U.S. imports from China, Mexico, Canada, and Japan were worth USD 505.60 billion, USD 314.05 billion, USD 229.98 billion, and USD 136.54 billion, respectively, accounting for 21.6 percent, 13.4 percent, 12.8 percent, and 5.8 percent of the total U.S. imports. In 2018, U.S. imports from China, Mexico, Canada, and Japan were worth USD 539.50 billion, USD 346.53 billion, USD 318.48 billion, and USD 142.60 billion, respectively, accounting for 21.2 percent, 13.6 percent, 12.5 percent, and 5.6 percent of the total U.S. imports. In 2019, U.S. imports from China, Mexico, Canada, and Japan were worth USD 452.24 billion, USD 358.13 billion, USD 319.74 billion, and USD 143.64 billion, respectively, accounting for 18.1 percent, 14.3 percent, 12.8 percent, and 5.8 percent of the total U.S. imports.
Trade policy uncertainty refers to the possibility of changes in a country’s trade policy, mainly including the possibility of the non-renewal of tariff preference programs, temporary trade bans, economic sanctions, intellectual property disputes, anti-dumping measures, and so on. Since the establishment of the World Trade Organization, countries worldwide have been conducting international trade under the framework of the multilateral rules of the World Trade Organization, and the level of trade policy uncertainty has greatly decreased. Since the subprime crisis, being affected by the worldwide economic downturn, some countries began to adjust their international trade policies, significantly increasing the trade policy uncertainty faced by trading partner countries. According to the Global Trade Alert website, in recent years, the U.S. has been among the top countries in the world in terms of the number of interventions that have been implemented and that are harmful to trade development.
The slow growth of the U.S. economy in recent years, especially the serious hollowing out of the manufacturing sector and the decline in the international competitiveness of traditional manufacturing industries, has led to the rise of protectionist forces in the United States. In particular, Trump’s “America First” unilateralism and trade frictions against China during his presidency dramatically increased the level of trade policy uncertainty facing China’s exports to the United States. The U.S. Trade Policy Uncertainty Index, compiled by Scott R. Baker, Nick Bloom, and Steven J. Davis [
1], shows that since Trump launched trade frictions against major trading partners in 2017, the U.S. Trade Policy Uncertainty Index has climbed rapidly and is much higher than the U.S. Trade Policy Uncertainty Index under the Obama administration. The huge level of trade policy uncertainty once cast a huge shadow over the prospect of Sino–U.S. trade, and although the trade tensions between China and the U.S. have since eased, China’s export trade to the U.S. will still face huge levels of trade uncertainty under the influence of uncertain events such as the continued global spread of the new Coronavirus epidemic, the significant decline in the US dollar, the unclear policy orientation of the U.S. Biden administration towards China, and the reshaping of the U.S. supply chain.
Osnago et al. argued that trade policy uncertainty is also an obstacle for world trade [
2]. China is the world’s largest developing country and the largest exporter of goods. Is U.S. trade policy uncertainty also an obstacle for China’s exports to the United States? What is the specific impact on the structure of China’s export growth (trade margins) to the United States? Is this impact consistent across different broad product categories? How should China respond? The resolution of these questions will not only help us to understand the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on the growth structure of China’s exports to the America, but will also facilitate measures that China can take to properly respond to various uncertainties in U.S. trade policy toward China. Therefore, in this study, we developed a panel regression model to answer these questions by using data from the CEPII database, the WDI database, and the U.S. Trade Policy Uncertainty Index for the period 2001–2019, with the trade margins of 21 major categories of Chinese exports to the United States as dependent variables.
The contributions of this study are mainly reflected in the following respects: First, the existing studies mainly focus on the impact of trade policy uncertainty on export flows, and most of the studies regarding trade margins only include the extensive margin and the intensive margin. Less of the literature focuses on the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on the price margin and quantity margin of China’s exports to the U.S. In this study, we systematically examined the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on the extensive margin, the intensive margin, the price margin, and the quantity margin of China’s exports to the U.S. The results of this study further enrich and expand research into the trade effects of trade policy uncertainty. Second, we conducted this study from the perspective of trade margins, revealing the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on the growth structure of China’s exports to the U.S., which has a certain policy reference significance for our accurate understanding of the impact of external economic policy uncertainty on exporting countries and other reasonable responses.
The rest of the research is organized as follows: A review of the relevant literature regarding trade margins, trade policy uncertainty, and Sino–U.S. exports is presented in
Section 2. The theoretical framework is provided in
Section 3. The trade margin decomposition framework, empirical methodology, variable selection, and data sources are introduced in
Section 4. The results and discussion are analyzed in
Section 5.
Section 6 contains the conclusion and policy recommendations.
2. Literature Review
Both classical and neo-classical trade theories focus on the theory of comparative advantage, arguing that one country’s export growth is due to the growth of the intensive margin, which is the only way to cause export trade growth. Neo-trade theory argues that economies of scale and product diversification lead to export growth, with the core idea that export product diversification makes the extensive margin an important way of achieving export growth. When the new neo-trade theory was born with the study of firm heterogeneity, the trade growth theory developed to a new level, which integrated the views of the previous theories and argued that export trade could grow along both the extensive margin and the intensive margin [
3]. Hummels and Klenow split the binary margin into ternary margins, namely the extensive margin, quantity margin, and price margin, establishing the groundwork for other researchers to investigate the ternary margins [
4].
Various researchers have researched export trade growth extensively and with varying conclusions. Some experts’ studies, such as Helpman and Freund, showed that the intensive margin was more significant for export growth [
5]. Amurgo-Pcheco and Pierola found that in virtually all countries, export growth mostly depends on the intensive margin and that the extensive margin contributes little to export growth when comparing the exports of developed and developing nations [
6]. Liu et al. found that quantity margin was a main driving force of China’s export boom [
7].
Scholars have steadily increased their study on trade policy uncertainty in recent years, mostly focusing on studies regarding the influence of trade policy uncertainty on trade, commodity prices, household income, investment, and changes in national welfare. Among them, there are two main mechanisms of the impact of trade policy uncertainty on exports; on the one hand, rising or falling changes in trade policy uncertainty would affect exporters’ expectations of future earnings and would prompt exporters to exit or enter the export market. Kyle Handley found that trade policy uncertainty affects firms’ expectations of future earnings. If the level of trade policy uncertainty decreases, the number of firms entering the export market will increase [
8]. In addition, on the other hand, changes in trade policy uncertainty would also have an impact on the importing country’s own business activities, which would ultimately affect imports. Changes in trade policy uncertainty would affect changes in the cost of imported goods purchased by domestic consumers. Michele Imbruno, based on a trade policy uncertainty perspective, explored the identification of the larger grocery costs that may be faced when purchasing foreign goods [
9]. Changes in trade policy uncertainty would also influence business investment; Dario Caldara et al. examined the impact of unexpected changes in trade policy uncertainty on the U.S. economy and found that an increase in the level of TPU reduces the level of business investment activity [
10]. Constantinescu et al. used data from 18 countries and 24 years of policy uncertainty to find that a 1% increase in uncertainty would lead to a 0.02% decrease in the growth of trade in goods and services, and in particular, an increase in the level of policy uncertainty since mid-2018 could lead to a 1% decrease in world trade growth [
11]. According to Kyriazis Nikolaos A., trade policy uncertainty makes products more expensive and of lower quality, and it also makes people less likely to engage in international trade [
12]. In general, trade policy uncertainty hinders economic globalization [
13].
No more consistent findings have been presented regarding the effects of trade policy uncertainty on the intensive and extensive margins, with various conclusions reported for different samples. Some empirical studies have revealed that trade policy uncertainty mostly influences commerce through the extensive margin. Carballo et al. showed that an increased level of trade policy uncertainty reduces overall trade and the extensive margin while having no effect on the intensive margin [
14]. Another group of experts believed that trade policy uncertainty mostly impacted commerce through the intensive margin. Osnago et al. discovered that a 1% reduction in trade policy uncertainty was connected with a 12% rise in the number of product categories exported, while the existence of trade policy uncertainty was comparable to a 1.7% to 8.7% increase in tariffs [
2]. However, it had also been proposed that trade policy uncertainty influences trade through the intensive and extensive margins. Handley et al. [
15] and Shepotylo and Stuckatz [
16] indicated that reductions in the level of trade policy uncertainty led to the expansion of both the intensive and extensive margins. Zhou Fengxiu and Wen Huwei analyzed the impact of trade policy uncertainty on firms’ export behavior using panel data from listed firms in China’s industrial sector. The empirical results showed that a high level of trade policy uncertainty significantly inhibits the expansion margin and the intensification margin of firms’ exports [
17]. Other scholars take a different view on the impact of trade policy uncertainty on trade margins. Andrew Greenland et al. examined the impact of policy uncertainty on exports in 18 large economies and found that an increased level of policy uncertainty reduces the extensive margin but increases the intensive margin [
18].
Regarding the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty, Olasehinde discovered that U.S. trade policy uncertainty was a significant predictor of global production volatility [
19]. Rexford Abaidoo showed that economic policy uncertainty associated with the United States often had significant negative or restrictive effects on international trade [
20]. Yan et al. discovered that increases in the level of U.S. trade policy uncertainty had significant adverse impacts on China’s yield, consumption, and net exports in both the long and short run but had a positive effect on investment in the near term and a negative effect in the mid to long term [
21]. Some scholars argued that policy uncertainty lowered U.S. prices and increased consumer incomes by the equivalent of a permanent 13 percentage point reduction in tariffs. Chen Xiaoping and Zhao Xiaotao found that the decline in the level of trade policy uncertainty between China and the U.S. reduced the volatility of firms’ exports to the U.S. but increased the volatility of exports to other countries and regions in the world, using data regarding Chinese exporters before and after China’s WTO accession [
22]. Changes in trade policy uncertainty, according to Serdar Ongan and Ismet Gocer, were significant determinants of U.S. trade volume in bilateral trade with China, and a decline in the level of TPU would boost Chinese exports to the U.S. in the short run [
23]. Using Chinese customs transaction data from 2000 to 2009, Meredith Crowley et al. found that, when Chinese firms’ products encountered increased levels of trade policy uncertainty, the likelihood of exiting mature foreign markets also increased [
24]. Studies on the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on China’s exports to the U.S. have focused on the binary margin of trade. According to Feng et al., the decrease in ambiguity regarding U.S. trade policy toward China since China’s entrance to the WTO had increased Chinese exports to the U.S. This was realized through an increase in the extensive margin rather than an increase in the intensive margin [
25].
Scholars have researched trade policy uncertainty in a variety of areas and have reached convincing and informative conclusions, but only a few studies have focused on the effect of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on Chinese exports, particularly with regard to the extensive margin, intensive margin, price margin, and quantity margin of U.S. trade uncertainty on Chinese exports to the U.S., and research findings are few and far between. As a result, in this article, we investigated the influence of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on the trade margins of China’s exports to the U.S.
3. Theoretical Framework
This study referred to Melitz’s [
3] neo-neo-trade theory model and drew on the model of Liu et al. [
26].
Assume that the consumer preference function for the importing country is
where
qj(ω) denotes the number of products consumed by consumers in the importing country,
ω denotes the product type,
Φ denotes the set of product types, and
σ denotes the elasticity of substitution between products (
σ > 1).
The demand function can be solved by maximizing consumer utility as follows:
where
Yj denotes the total expenditure in importing country
j,
Pj denotes the product price, and
Ij is the price index of importing country
j.
The enterprise needs to pay a fixed cost
f and a variable production cost
q/
φ depending on labor productivity to produce the product in quantity
q. Therefore, the enterprise profit function can be organized as follows:
According to the conditions when the firm maximizes profit, the optimal price in the domestic market is obtained:
The firm’s equilibrium price in the domestic market is multiplied by the variable trade cost (
τ) to obtain the export market price
Px:
Drawing on Handley [
8], the probability of a tariff change is set to
γ to indicate the risk of tariff adjustment by the importing party, with a smaller
γ indicating a lower level of trade policy uncertainty. When a shock occurs, the policy maker will reset the new tariff level
τ′, and the new tariff obeys the
H(τ′) distribution, with
τ′ taking values between [1,
τmax], with
τmax referring to the maximum tariff that may be imposed by the foreign country.
Firms entering the export destination market need to pay a one-time entry cost (sunk cost), and firms deciding to export to foreign countries pay a fixed cost of export
fx per period. Referring to Feng [
25], fixed export costs are assumed to increase with the number of exporting firms,
fx =
Nkf, with
N representing the number of exporting firms and
k denoting the degree of congestion into the export market (
k ≥ 0).
According to Equations (2)–(5), the variable profit function and earnings of exporters can be obtained as follows:
Let
µ(φ) denote the productivity distribution of surviving firms, and let the price index be expressed as follows:
Bringing Equation (5) into Equation (7) gives the following equation:
where
represents the average productivity of the surviving firm. Bringing Equation (8) into Equation (6) gives the following equation:
Whether a firm exports or not is based on a comparison between the present value of variable profits and the fixed cost of exporting, and the firm will only export if the present value of variable profits is greater than the fixed cost of exporting. The present value of variable profits for a firm with a production rate
φ is
Taking the expectation on both sides of Equation (10) yields the following equation:
Bringing Equation (11) into Equation (10), the present value of variable profit is expressed as
Let
. The square brackets in Equation (12) denote the weighted average of current variable profits, mainly based on the current tariff
τt and the unconditional expected variable profits that explain the uncertainty of future tariff changes. If trade policy uncertainty increases, i.e.,
γ increases, firms will increase the weight of the expected variable profit term and decrease the weight of the profit term based on the currently applied tariffs.
Let
,
. Thus, Equation (13) can be simplified as
According to Equation (14), the expected profit of the firm’s export can be expressed as
The variable profit of a firm with average productivity is
Thus, the average profit of the firm can be expressed as
When trade policy uncertainty increases, the expected term E(τ−1) decreases, and thus, the compound tariff term T decreases. It is clear from Equation (16) that the decrease in T implies a lower expected return to entry, leading to a large number of firms exiting the export market.
From this analysis, it is clear that an increase in the level of trade policy uncertainty will force low- and medium-productivity firms to exit the export market, which will inhibit the increase in the extensive margin, the intensive margin, and the quantity margin. An increase in the level of trade policy uncertainty means that exporters are highly likely to face a tariff increase, and high-productivity firms may be forced to choose to reduce the price quoted for export goods in order to have a market share and maintain the stability of the end price in the export market, meaning an increase in the level of trade policy uncertainty will also suppress the price margin of exports.
6. Conclusions and Policy Recommendation
In this paper, we used trade data in the HS6 quantile of the CEPII BACI database from 2001 to 2019 to estimate the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on the trade margins of Chinese exports of U.S. goods using a panel random effects model, focusing on the influence of changes in U.S. trade policy uncertainty on the type, quantity, and price of Chinese exports of U.S. goods. It was found that the effects of the annual U.S. trade policy uncertainty index (calculated using the arithmetic average method) and the annual U.S. trade policy uncertainty index (calculated using the weighted average method) on the extensive margin, intensive margin, price margin, and quantity margin of China’s exports of U.S. goods are consistent, i.e., an increase in the level of U.S. trade policy uncertainty will significantly inhibit the increase in the extensive margin and quantity margin of China’s exports of U.S. goods. A decline in the level of U.S. trade policy uncertainty will significantly contribute to the improvement in the extensive margin, intensive margin, and quantity margin of China’s exports to the U.S. Changes in the level of U.S. trade policy uncertainty will not have a significant impact on the price margin of China’s exports to the U.S. It can be said that U.S. trade policy uncertainty is also a trade barrier for China’s exports. There were some limitations to this study, as we did not analyze the impact of U.S. trade policy uncertainty on China’s commodity exports in various industries from the perspective of more detailed and specific industries, which is a direction that needs to be researched further in the future.
With the improvement in China’s comprehensive national strength and the decline in U.S. influence, the U.S. is bound to suppress China in many ways for its own interests, especially in the trade sector, meaning China’s foreign export trade, especially to the U.S., may face a more complex and severe situation in the future. As of October 2022, the trade policy of imposing additional tariffs on imports from China under the Trump presidency is still being implemented; therefore, there many uncertainties will continue to affect U.S.–China trade in the future. According to the findings of this paper, for the sake of stabilizing China’s exports to the United States, China should make efforts to reduce the level of uncertainty of the U.S. trade policy towards China and its impact on Chinese exports. Specific measures can be taken in the following ways: First, China should increase the support given to the technological R&D and innovation of export enterprises and try to optimize the upgrading and adjustment of domestic industries to continuously improve the competitiveness of their export goods. Second, China should continue to expand bilateral or multilateral free trade agreements with other countries, especially to consolidate and strengthen China’s exports to “Belt and Road” countries to reduce the dependence of Chinese exporters on the U.S. market. Third, efforts should be made to promote the internationalization of RMB and maintain the stability of the RMB exchange rate, increase the proportion of RMB international settlement, and further reduce the exchange rate risk and uncertainty faced by Chinese enterprises’ exports.