HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series
HKS Working Paper No. RWP11-002
January 2011
Abstract
Lesotho and other least developed African countries responded impressively to the preferences they
were granted under the African Growth and Opportunities Act with a rapid increase in their clothing
exports to the US. But this performance has not been accompanied by some of the more dynamic growth
benefits that might have been hoped for. In this study we develop the theory and present empirical
evidence to demonstrate that these outcomes are the predictable consequences of the manner in which
the specific preferences might be expected to work.
The MFA (Multi-fiber Arrangement) quotas on US imports of textiles created a favorable environment
for low value-added, fabric-intensive clothing production in countries with unused quotas by inducing
constrained countries to move into higher quality products. By allowing the least developed African
countries to use third country fabrics in their clothing exports to the US, AGOA provided additional
implicit effective subsidies to clothing that were multiples of the US tariffs on clothing imports. Taken
together, these policies help account for the program’s success and demonstrate the importance of
other rules of origin in preventing poor countries from taking advantage of other preference programs.
But the disappointments can also be attributed to the preferences because they discouraged additional
value-addition in assembly and stimulated the use of expensive fabrics that were unlikely to be produced
locally. When the MFA was removed, constrained countries such as China moved strongly into precisely
the markets in which AGOA countries had specialized. Although AGOA helped the least developed
countries withstand this shock, they were nonetheless adversely affected. Preference erosion due to
MFN reductions in US clothing tariffs could similarly have particularly severe adverse effects on these
countries.
Citation
Edwards, Lawrence, and Robert Z. Lawrence. "AGOA Rules: The Intended and Unintended Consequences of Special Fabric Provisions." HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series and NBER Working Papers (RWP11-002 and 16623), January 2011