The Long and Short of Empirical Evidence on the Impact of NAFTA on Canada. Eugene Beaulieu Yang Song Mustafa Zamen

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The Long and Short of Empirical Evidence on the Impact of NAFTA on Canada Eugene Beaulieu Yang Song Mustafa Zamen

Overview Evolution of the debate and evidence The pre-nafta world: little white lies and malicious whoppers Giant sucking sounds www.policyschool.ca

Pre-CUSTA/NAFTA: The State of Trade and understanding trade Major transformation in the global economy: Technology revolution No Global value chains No China Understanding trade: No gravity No firms or identical firms no firm-level data www.policyschool.ca

Overview Predicted impacts The emerging evidence New models and new evidence www.policyschool.ca

Predicted impact: trade under Monopolistic Competition Gains From Trade Lower prices From increased productivity for surviving firms due to larger market & increasing returns to scale. Increased varieties Fewer product varieties made within each country, consumers have more product variety because they can choose products from the firms of both countries after trade opens.

Empirical Application of the Monopolistic Competition and Trade This model applied to Canada convinced policy makers to pursue free trade with the US The MacDonald Commission The potential for Canadian firms to expand output was a key factor in Canada s free-trade agreement with the U.S. in 1989 and entry into NAFTA (along with Mexico) in 1994.

Predicted impacts of CUSTA and NAFTA The economics of free trade: Three different perspectives Model Focus Assumptions Classic trade theory a) Long run gains in economic I. Perfect competition 2. comparative efficiency II. Full employment advantage a) Income distribution: affect of trade a) Factors are mobile 3. interindustry trade on wages of skilled and unskilled workers between sectors New trade theory 1. intra-industry trade i. Rationalization effects a) Scale economies b) Imperfect competition Macroeconomic ii. Stimulus (or drag) from added exports (or imports) iii. Effect on the labour market www.policyschool.ca 6

Canada: the emergence of "New trade theory": The Predicted Effect of CUSTA on Canada Model Assumptions/Focus Study Results General equilibrium: Classic trade theory perfect competition; constant returns to scale Brown and Stern (1987) Hamilton and Whalley (1985) -0.3% 0.6% New trade theory imperfect competition; Markusen and Wigle (1987) 0.6% rationalization effects Wigle (1988) -0.1% (scale economies) Canadian Dep. of Finance (1988) 2.5% Harris and Cox (1985) 8.9% Macroeconomic: Sectoral Magun et al (1988) 2.5% www.policyschool.ca 7

What is the evidence On trade On labour markets On firms and productivity www.policyschool.ca

What happens to trade? Does Canada become too dependent on trade with the US? www.policyschool.ca

0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Share of Total Canadian Exports to the United States, 1850-2010 1850 1853 1856 1859 1862 1865 1868 1896 1911 1926 1929 1932 1935 1938 1941 1944 1947 1950 1953 1956 1959 1962 1965 1968 1971 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 www.policyschool.ca

HHI imports 0.2.4.6 ABW KAZ FJI GTMKGZ PRY JAM SLV AUT BLZ LTU IRL LUX MDV KHM MAC BRNALB ARG MLT UKR CHE MNT MOZ CHL CYPBEL BGRBIH AZE ARM PRT NCL HUNMUS CZE NIC PYF BOL MLI FIN THA PAKPOL FRA BRA EUN AUS EGY GRC DEU GBR ESP CHN GEOGHA HRV IDN LVA LKA ROM MYS RUS UGA URY USA SVK SWE SVN IND EST JPN NZLOAS DZA MDA ISR KOR NLDNOR MDG ISL MKD RWA TUR ZAF SER SGP SEN LBNTGO BMU HKG WSM CAN MEX CPV OMN TCA 0.2.4.6.8 HHI exports www.policyschool.ca

7.00% Canadian Share of World Exports: 1995-2012 6.00% 5.00% 4.00% 3.00% 2.00% 1.00% 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Total all products Primary commodities, excluding fuels Fuels Manufactured goods www.policyschool.ca

Share of World Merchandise Trade by Region (%): 2005 Share of World Merchandise Trade by Region (%): 2012 10 15 21 43 17 37 24 30 Europe Asia North America Rest of World Europe Asia North America Rest of World www.policyschool.ca

HHI based on country vs HHI based on region 0.2.4.6.8 OMN MEX CAN HKG WSM BMU ALB SLV MAC GTM PRY PYF FJI BOL AUS CHL AUT CZE AZE BEL BIH BRA CHN ISR MDG MDV NIC ARG CHE DZA EST EUN GBR IDN GEO IRL ISL JPN MUS LBN KOR CYP FRADEU GRC ESP KAZ NOR LUX MKD MNT URY NZL PRT NLD PAK MLT HRV HUN LVA POL SVK USA SGP RUS ROM SVN LTU ZAF THA UGA FIN SWE BGR SER TUR.2.4.6.8 1 HHI computed from regional destination Fitted values Export HHI measured from country data www.policyschool.ca

Gravity is discovered www.policyschool.ca

The Gravity Equation for Canada and the United States Source: Feenstra and Taylor

The Gravity Equation for Canada and the United States Source: Feenstra and Taylor

The Gravity Equation Gravity model show there are barriers to trade continue to exist between those countries. These border effects include the following: Tariffs and quotas Administrative rules and regulations affecting trade, including the time required for goods to clear customs Geographic factors Cultural factors 9/11 and the impact of security measures at the border

The long and short of the impact on labour Trefler on CUSTA: Short-run adjustment costs of 100,000 jobs, or 5% of manufacturing employment. Some industries that had very large tariff cuts saw employment fall by as much as 12% Over time, however, these job losses were more than made up for by creation of new jobs elsewhere in manufacturing. There were no long run job losses due to NAFTA.

Using diff-in-diff: CUSTA/NAFTA and Focus: Skilled and unskilled workers Summary of CUSTA labour Tariffs eliminated over a ten year period the average tariff decline 3.8 % in Canada and 2.2 % in the US. the high tariff industries in Canada had a 6.1 % decline; low tariff industries had a 1.2 % decline.

Results: CUSTA did not affect earnings. Canadian tariff reductions lowered employment among production workers but no effect on non-production employment. Explanation: most protected industries prior to the CUSTA tariff cuts were intensive in the use of less-skilled workers.

CUSTA and rationalization Evidence from Head and Ries (1998) 1988-94, the number of plants decreased by 21% while output per plant increased by 34% a change in the structure of the Canadian manufacturing sector and an overvalued Canadian dollar. CUSTA led to fewer plants but also led to a reduction in plant scale

In the long run, large positive effects on productivity 15% over eight years in industries most affected by tariff cuts compound growth of 1.9%/year. 6% for manufacturing overall compound growth of 0.7%/year. The difference of 1.2%/year is an estimate of how free trade with the U.S. affected the Canadian industries over and above the impact on other industries. There was also a rise of 3% in real earnings over this period. Consistent the monopolistic competition model with firm heterogeneity.

Firm level data: Exchange rates Purpose: use Canadian firm level data to examine the effect of exchange rate movements on entry, exit and sales Why do we care? 1. Policy context How does the exchange rate affect firm performance? Productivity implications? 2. Understanding the impact of integration and the nature of industries New empirical trade literature (Melitz, Yeaple, Helpman) 3. Canadian context Relatively small tariff changes have been found to have had large effects on the Canadian manufacturing sector [Head and Reis (1999); Beaulieu (2000); Trefler (2004); Baggs (2005)] Large exchange rate movements may have had comparable effects How large an effect? This is an empirical question that has not been examined Little, or no evidence, of exchange rate effects: Using micro-level data Focused on developing countries Firm survival and the exchange rate 25

Nominal Canadian Exchange rate with entry and exit rates of firms 1986-98 0.90 9.00% 0.85 8.00% 0.80 7.00% US$/CDN$ 0.75 0.70 6.00% 5.00% US$/CDN$ %entrants %exits 0.65 0.60 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 Year 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 Firm survival and the exchange rate 4.00% 3.00% 26

Results Adverse effect of currency appreciation on firm survival; firm entry and firm sales the exchange rate effect is larger for larger firms Some evidence that currency appreciation led to productivity growth The effect of the exchange rate on survival is three times larger than the effect of the tariff changes Firm survival and the exchange rate 27

Impact of CUSTA/NAFTA CUSTA/NAFTA extremely successful Reduction in trade barriers increased NA trade dramatically and trade dependence Rationalization, increased scale Continental integration - NA supply chains Increased productivity Maybe too successful? Still large border effect more attention required North American file has been dropped complacency, lack of political will www.policyschool.ca