Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Journal Article

Don’t Take Me for a Free-ride: Chinese Agricultural Geographical Indications and Firms' Export Quality

Agricultural Economics, 56(2): 188–209

Authors

  • Mao
  • H.; Görg
  • H.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1111/agec.12871

JEL Classification

F10 Q18

Key Words

Agricultural Geographical Indications

Export quality

Free-riding

China

Related Topics

International Trade

Emerging Markets & Developing Countries

China

: GI is a rising policy in developing countries, which has been relatively neglected in the existing literature. This paper studies Chinese agricultural Geographical Indications and its impact on firms’ exports. By relating newly authorized GIs with firm-product-location-destination level custom trade data according to GI’s geographical coverage and product type, we estimate the impact of these new GIs on firm’s exports. Importantly, we can distinguish GIs with and without quality supervision. For the latter we find negative impacts on export quality, which is not the case for GIs with quality supervision. We interpret this in the context of our theoretical framework as evidence for quality free-riding, where individual firms have an incentive to lower the quality of the export product. We show that this negative effect is less, the more concentrated an industry is or the more GIs there are for a particular product. Furthermore, our results suggest that the China-EU agreement on geographical indications may play the role of quality supervision and prevent the possibility of free-riding.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Holger Görg, Ph.D.
    Research Director

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • man on street

    China

  • View over cargo ship deck with containers

    International Trade

  • People demonstrating against war in the Ukraine

    War against Ukraine

Research Center

  • Trade