CEPII, Recherche et Expertise sur l'economie mondiale
MAcMap-HS6


Description


MAcMap-HS6 (Market Access Map HS6) provides a disaggregated, exhaustive and bilateral measurement of applied tariff duties. It  takes regional agreements and trade preferences exhaustively into account. The source data is from ITC (UNCTAD-WTO).

This dataset is constructed for analytical purposes and provides an ad valorem equivalent (percentage) of applied protection for each triplet (importer-exporter-product) for various years.

An HS6 version of MAcMap-HS6 for 152 importing countries and 189 exporting countries for the years 2001, 2004, 2007, 2010, 2013 and 2016 can be downloaded in the replication package of Fontagné L., Guimbard H., and Orefice G. (2022), Tariff-Based Product Level Trade Elasticities, Journal of International Economics, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2022.103593 (see the download section).

Please read our FAQ and the journal article describing the methodology used to build the dataset (Guimbard et al, 2012). If you don't find the answer to your question, please contact us.


Reference document to cite: Guimbard, H., Jean, S., Mimouni, M. & Pichot, X. (2012) MacMap-HS6 2007, an exhaustive and consistent measure of applied protection in 2007. International Economics, Q2, 2012, p. 99-122.

Person in charge & contact: Houssein Guimbard, macmaphs6cepii.fr

Licence: Creative Commons BY NC SA

Download
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The MAcMap-HS6 database for 152 importing countries and 189 exporting countries, for years 2001, 2004, 2007, 2010, 2013 and 2016, at the HS6 level (revision 2007), is available here (The link to download a unique zipped file is available in the file named READ_ME_SOURCE_DATA_v3.txt).

The year 2019 is available here, in a version that contains only tariffs for the years 2001-2019 (every three years).

Other versions of MAcMap-HS6 are available on request for academic use.

Moreover, MAcMap-HS6 is available for years  2001, 2004 et 2007, in an aggregated version (HS2 and GTAP sectors, version 9).
 

Methodology
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To minimize endogeneity problems (when computing unit values or when aggregating data), the MAcMap-HS6 methodology relies on the concept of "reference groups of countries": bilateral unit values and bilateral trade are replaced by those of the reference group of countries (on the export side for unit values??, on the import side for weighting scheme).
 
MAcMap-HS6 treats specific duties (per unit) as well as TRQs and offers MFN for WTO members. Contingent protection is not included.
F.A.Q.
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What are the different products of the MAcMap family?     

Basically, two products are associated to the MAcMap denomination:
  • The MAcMap “Tariff Lines level” database, yearly updated and managed by the ITC. See https://www.macmap.org/
  • The MAcMap-HS6 database. It is an harmonized version of the previous one. It is built and updated by the CEPII and made available upon request for academic work (The replication package of Fontagné et al (2022) provides HS6 data for years 2001-2016, every three years).  

What are the main operations applied to the raw protection data?

If a large part of the job deals with harmonisation and aberrant values hunting, some important tasks are performed in order to obtain the MAcMap-HS6 distribution starting from the raw data (at the tariff line level). In particular:
  • Collection of duties is done by ITC (agreements with WTO countries, purchasing data, or gathering public information made available online by countries – e.g. TARIC for the EU etc.).
  • ITC processes Tariff Lines data with a method developed by CEPII and ITC to build an analytical database useful for academic research and quantitative evaluations of tariff trade policies:
    • Management of the mixed tariffs, i.e. including operator such as MAX and MIN between Ad Valorem and Specific tariffs. In these cases, the Ad Valorem component is always selected;
    • From the tariff lines level to the HS6 (first stage of common nomenclature) a simple average is performed across products belonging to the same HS6 code;
    • Check implementation of RTAs and preferences.
 
  • CEPII then processes HS6 data:
    • Detection and conversion in a single HS6 revision for a given year;
    • Conversion of per unit duties in tons;
    • Computation of relevant unit values to convert specific component in Equivalent Ad Valorem duties;
  • Specific treatment of the TRQs (so far, it concerns 2001, 2004, 2007, 2016).

Does MAcMap-HS6 give an exhaustive description of the worldwide pattern of protection?

MAcMap-HS6 provides an exhaustive description (for most recent years, around 190 importers, 240 exporters and more than 5,000 products) of the tariff protection (taking into account trade agreements and preference systems such as GSP, EBA, etc.).


What does the “Reference Groups” concept implies for the MAcMap-HS6 dataset?

The CEPII’s works on applied protection data rely on the concept of “Reference Groups” for two independent elements:
  • For the construction of the dataset and the computation of unit values. Countries are gathered in “Exporter Reference Group” in order to determine the unit values for the conversion of specific tariffs. It is a compromise between bilateral unit values (to be used if they were not so noisy due to measurement mistakes) and world unit values (more robust but neglecting the discriminatory impact of specific tariffs on low prices exporters);
  • For the aggregation methodology since we propose an alternative weighting scheme to the classic trade weighted one in order to limit the endogeneity problem. So, we do not take bilateral trade flows but for a given product the trade between the exporter and the Reference Group of the Importer.

So, for a user of the MAcMap-HS6 dataset, the Reference groups approach has an impact on the definition of ERGUV (unit value). The use of MAcMap-HS6 Reference Groups weights for aggregation is purely optional.

It is noteworthy to remember that the Reference groups are not built on ad-hoc criteria but using a clustering methodology based on Purchase-Parity-Power Income per capita and degree of openness in order to gather countries that should present similarities in trade patterns.

Please note that the Reference groups are the ones computed for the first version of MAcMap-HS6 (i.e. 2001).