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Abstract
Since the FDA’s adoption of HACCP standards in 1997, there has been concern that these standards
have continuously acted as a barrier to trade for seafood exports from developing countries. This study
compares trade data of seafood exports to the U.S with the refusal data from the FDA, in order to
determine if there is a continuous negative effect of the FDA’s stringent standards on trade across the top
seafood exporting countries to the U.S. Overall, it is found that the bulk of seafood refusals are from
developing countries, notably a small group of lower‐middle income Asian countries who are also some of
the largest exporters of seafood to the U.S. Relative to how much they trade, developing countries actually
have had better or roughly equivalent compliance rates at the U.S border, and there were no differential
effects found on the impact of refusals on trade for any of the top seafood exporting countries. Learning
was not observed with this data for any of the top exporting countries to the U.S, implying more research
may be required at the firm level in these countries to continue studying ‘standards as barriers’.