Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing

Canada and the US are highly integrated economies and yet persistent productivity gaps exist between them. This raises the question whether there is a relationship in productivity between Canada and the US, and if so, what industry-specific characteristics are important. This dissertation focuses...

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Main Author: Li, Jiang
Other Authors: Voss, Graham M.
Language:English
en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5282
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVIV.1828-52822014-06-20T03:49:50Z Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing Essays on Canada-U.S. Productivity in Manufacturing Li, Jiang Voss, Graham M. industries manufacturing labour labor Canada and the US are highly integrated economies and yet persistent productivity gaps exist between them. This raises the question whether there is a relationship in productivity between Canada and the US, and if so, what industry-specific characteristics are important. This dissertation focuses on the manufacturing sector and its component three-digit industries. The first chapter investigates the interdependence of labour productivity (LP) between the two countries. It finds no evidence of long-run convergence of US and Canadian LP. There is, however, some evidence of short-run dependence within industries. Regarding industry characteristics, only industry-specific export intensity is found to be an important channel for the long-run productivity transmission. The second chapter develops measures of total factor productivity (TFP) that are comparable across Canada and the US. The third chapter investigates the interdependence of TFP between the countries. As with LP, there is no evidence of long-run convergence. In both the short and long run, the dependence of Canadian manufacturing industries upon their US counterparts is limited and non-uniform. The fourth chapter examines industry-specific characteristics. Export, import and foreign direct investment (FDI) intensities are found to be important channels in the short run for technology diffusion from the US. Surprisingly, a higher research and development intensity reduces short-run technology diffusion. In the long run, export and FDI intensities are shown to contribute to technology diffusion. Graduate 2015-04-17 0501 berylli@uvic.ca 2014-04-25T18:36:15Z 2014-04-25T18:36:15Z 2014 2014-04-25 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5282 English en Available to the World Wide Web http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic industries
manufacturing
labour
labor
spellingShingle industries
manufacturing
labour
labor
Li, Jiang
Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing
description Canada and the US are highly integrated economies and yet persistent productivity gaps exist between them. This raises the question whether there is a relationship in productivity between Canada and the US, and if so, what industry-specific characteristics are important. This dissertation focuses on the manufacturing sector and its component three-digit industries. The first chapter investigates the interdependence of labour productivity (LP) between the two countries. It finds no evidence of long-run convergence of US and Canadian LP. There is, however, some evidence of short-run dependence within industries. Regarding industry characteristics, only industry-specific export intensity is found to be an important channel for the long-run productivity transmission. The second chapter develops measures of total factor productivity (TFP) that are comparable across Canada and the US. The third chapter investigates the interdependence of TFP between the countries. As with LP, there is no evidence of long-run convergence. In both the short and long run, the dependence of Canadian manufacturing industries upon their US counterparts is limited and non-uniform. The fourth chapter examines industry-specific characteristics. Export, import and foreign direct investment (FDI) intensities are found to be important channels in the short run for technology diffusion from the US. Surprisingly, a higher research and development intensity reduces short-run technology diffusion. In the long run, export and FDI intensities are shown to contribute to technology diffusion. === Graduate === 2015-04-17 === 0501 === berylli@uvic.ca
author2 Voss, Graham M.
author_facet Voss, Graham M.
Li, Jiang
author Li, Jiang
author_sort Li, Jiang
title Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing
title_short Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing
title_full Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing
title_fullStr Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing
title_full_unstemmed Essays on Canada-US Productivity in Manufacturing
title_sort essays on canada-us productivity in manufacturing
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/5282
work_keys_str_mv AT lijiang essaysoncanadausproductivityinmanufacturing
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