Trade and Industrial Policy in Supply Chains: Directed Technological Change in Rare Earths (Discussion Paper)

Author
Fadinger, Harald ;
Schymik, Jan S ;
Virananda, Gede
Date issued
September 2025
Subject
Trade in Services;
Industrial Policy;
Intellectual Property;
Intra-Regional Trade;
Export;
Innovation;
Manufacturing Industry;
Science and Technology;
Integration and Trade
JEL code
F13 - Trade Policy • International Trade Organizations;
F14 - Empirical Studies of Trade;
F42 - International Policy Coordination and Transmission;
O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences • Diffusion Processes;
O47 - Empirical Studies of Economic Growth • Aggregate Productivity • Cross-Country Output Convergence
Category
Discussion Papers
Trade and industrial policies, while primarily intended to support domestic industries, may unintentionally stimulate technological progress abroad. We document this mechanism in the case of rare earth elements (REEs)--critical inputs for manufacturing at the knowledge frontier, with low elasticity of substitution, inelastic supply, and high production and processing concentration. To assess the importance of REEs across industries, we construct an input-output table that includes disaggregated REE inputs. Using REE-related patents categorized by a large language model, sectoral TFP data, trade data, and physical and chemical substitution properties of REEs, we show that the introduction of REE export restrictions by China led to a global surge in innovation and exports in REE-intensive downstream sectors outside of China. To rationalize these findings and quantify the global impact of the adverse
REE supply shock, we develop a quantitative general equilibrium model of trade and directed technological change. We also propose a structural method to estimate sectoral input substitution elasticities for REEs from patent data and find REEs to be complementary inputs. Under endogenous technologies and with complementary inputs, input supply restrictions on REEs induce a surge in REE-enhancing innovation and lead to an expansion of REE-intensive downstream sectors.
NO