dc.description.abstract | The European Union imports over 22.4% of total Kenyan exports and is market
to over 51.3% of Kenya’s untapped export potential. However, there is a dearth of
knowledge on how trade agreements, technical regulations, and standards influence
competitiveness of firms exporting to the market. This study uses customs
firm-product (HS 2 digit)-destination data ranging from 2007 to 2020 to examine
the competitiveness implications of trade agreements and the resultant technical
regulations and standards on firms that export to the European Union. The stylized
facts demonstrate that countries offering the largest preferential margin to exporting
firms are the very same countries with the largest number of technical regulations
and standards faced by exporters. Controlling for potential simultaneity, results
from random and fixed-effects models demonstrate that higher preferential margins
emanating from trade agreements are associated with increases in market power and
the number of products per exporter. However, higher preferential margins emanating
from trade agreements are associated with a decline in the number of exporters
per product driven by internal economies of scale, specialization, product differentiation,
and technological advantage among firms. Higher technical regulations are
associated with improvement in market competitiveness and number of products per
exporter. Higher number of standards is associated with a rise in market power, but
a decline in the number of products per exporter and the number of exporters per
product. The findings have policy implications to developing countries especially
those within the African, Caribbean, and Pacific bloc which has an existing trading
arrangement with the EU and touch on a need to strengthen domestic technical
and administrative capacity to comply with existing technical regulations and
standards especially among MSEs, cooperation in quality management and assurance,
strengthening of institutional links for information exchange, and credit support
targeting exporting MSEs which have comparative disadvantage in technology
and economies of scale. | en |