TY - JOUR AU - Blonigen,Bruce A. AU - Prusa,Thomas J. TI - Antidumping JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 8398 PY - 2001 Y2 - July 2001 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8398 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8398.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Bruce Blonigen Department of Economics 1285 University of Oregon Eugene, OR 97403-1285 Tel: 541/346-4680 Fax: 541/346-1243 E-Mail: bruceb@uoregon.edu Thomas J. Prusa Department of Economics New Jersey Hall Rutgers University New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1248 Tel: 908.443.1565 E-Mail: prusa@econ.rutgers.edu AB - We review the growing literature on the effects of antidumping, a trade policy that has emerged as the most serious impediment to international trade. Over the past 25 years countries have increasingly turned to antidumping in order to offer protection to import-competing industries. Antidumping is a trade policy where the institutional process surrounding the investigation and determinations has significant impacts beyond the antidumping duty we observe, and where the filing decision, the legal determination, and the protective impact are all endogenous with firms' decisions in the market, leading to a wealth of potential strategic actions and distorted market outcomes. This theme underlies our discussion as we review the literature in three broad areas connected with different phases of the antidumping trade policy process: 1) pre-investigation, 2) investigation, and 3) post-investigation. ER -