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School of Business | Department of Economics | Economics | 2009
Thesis number: 12057
The Russian forest industry: a case of competitiveness and export taxes
Author: Mäkelä, Tuomas
Title: The Russian forest industry: a case of competitiveness and export taxes
Year: 2009  Language: eng
Department: Department of Economics
Academic subject: Economics
Index terms: kansantaloustiede; economics; metsäteollisuus; forest industry; Venäjä; Russia; kilpailukyky; competitiveness; vienti; exports; tullit; customs duties
Pages: 88
Full text:
» hse_ethesis_12057.pdf pdf  size:731 KB (748412)
Key terms: Russia; forest industry; competitiveness; export taxes
Abstract:
Objectives

This study examines the theories of competitiveness and export taxes and applies these theories to the Russian forest industry and the proposed roundwood export taxes that Russia is currently implementing. The goal of this study is to provide a well rounded picture of the Russian forest industry and to answer questions about what commodities it is competitive in, and about how will the export taxes affect its competitiveness and welfare. These goals are attained by utilizing various theories and by calculating parameters to better describe the Russian forest industry’s current state. This thesis also looks at the global forest sector, its politics, and Russia’s place in it, and calculates an optimal export tax for Russia.

Data

The trade data utilized to calculate the competitiveness of the Russian forest sector is gathered from the United Nations Comtrade database and includes 216 commodities classified at the 6-digit level from 128 countries. RCA and PRODY values are calculated for all commodities and an EXPY value for all countries for the year 2006. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations statistics database Faostat is also used to calculate an optimal export tax for Russia and Herfindahl Hirschman Indexes for the concentrations of global supply and demand for roundwood.

Results

The Russian forest sector is found to be competitive primarily in products with a low added value. The competitiveness of the sector is not below what is expected from a country in Russia’s stage of development (measured by GDP per capita). The actual forest sector is fragmented in the case of logging, harvesting, and sawmills, and somewhat more concentrated in pulp and paper production. Russia is a major world exporter of industrial roundwood and hence could benefit from a relatively high export tax on roundwood exports, but the taxes currently suggested go even higher than this and are in effect prohibitive to trade. Russia faces a more concentrated world demand for its roundwood exports, but also operates in a more concentrated supplier market. Russia may be able to encourage investment into its processing sector by raising barriers to trade, but the costs of investing in Russia may remain too high to make this optimal even with the barriers in place. The main loser in the Russian forest sector because of the export taxes will be the logging and harvesting industry, while the main winners will be the sawmills and producers of plywood and pulp.
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