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Relative Multifactor Productivity Levels in Canada and the United States

Relative Multifactor Productivity Levels in Canada and the United States
Author: John Russel Baldwin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 45
Release: 2008
Genre: Capital productivity
ISBN: 9781100102375

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"This paper has three main objectives. First, it examines the level of multifactor productivity (MFP) in Canada relative to that of the United States for the 1994-to-2003 period. Second, it examines the relative importance of differences in capital intensity and MFP in accounting for the labour productivity differences between the two countries. Third, it traces the overall MFP difference between Canada and the United States to its industry origins and estimates the contributions of the goods, services and engineering sectors to the overall MFP gap."--Document.


The Productivity Differential Between the Canadian and U.S. Manufacturing Sectors

The Productivity Differential Between the Canadian and U.S. Manufacturing Sectors
Author: John Russel Baldwin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 35
Release: 2008
Genre: Industrial capacity
ISBN: 9781100115320

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"This paper examines differences in output per worker in the manufacturing sectors of Canada and the United States in 1929 and the extent to which it arises from efficiency differences. It makes corrections for differences in capital and materials intensity per worker in order to derive a measure of total factor efficiency of Canada relative to the United States, using detailed industry data. It finds that while output per worker in Canada was only about 75% of the United States productivity level, the total factor productivity measure of Canada was about the same as the United States level--that is, there was very little difference in technical efficiency in the two countries. Canada's lower output per worker was the result of the use of less capital and materials per worker than the United States."--Document.


A Frontier Approach to Canada-U.S. Multifactor Productivity Performance

A Frontier Approach to Canada-U.S. Multifactor Productivity Performance
Author: Statistics Canada. Micro-Economic Analysis Division
Publisher: Statistics Canada
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2003
Genre: Canada
ISBN: 9780662332435

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This paper explores an alternate experimental measure of multifactor productivity growth based on the production frontier, a method that benchmarks observed units (firms or industries) against an estimated best-practice production frontier. This estimated frontier specifies the maximum possible output that can be produced from different combinations of inputs, based on the observed input-output mixes of sampled industries or firms. Benchmarking each unit against such a frontier generates a relative measure of its efficiency compared to what is theoretically possible by following best practice. This measure is based on distance from the estimated production frontier.


Long-term Productivity Growth in Manufacturing in Canada and the United States, 1961 to 2003

Long-term Productivity Growth in Manufacturing in Canada and the United States, 1961 to 2003
Author: John R. Baldwin
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2007
Genre: Industrial productivity
ISBN: 9780662473770

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In this paper, we provide an international comparison of the growth in Canadian and U.S. manufacturing industries over the 1961-to-2003 period. We find that average annual growth rates of labour productivity growth were almost identical in the Canadian and U.S. manufacturing sectors during this period. But the sources of labour productivity growth differed in the two countries. Intermediate input deepening was a more important source of labour productivity growth in Canada than in the United States, while investment in capital and multifactor productivity (MFP) growth were more important in the United States than in Canada. After 1996, labour productivity growth in Canada was lower than in the United States. The post-1996 slower labour productivity growth in Canada relative to the United States was due to slower growth in MFP and slower growth in capital intensity. The slower MFP growth in Canada accounted for 60% of Canada-United States labour productivity growth difference, and slower growth in capital intensity accounted for 30%. The slower MFP growth in the Canadian manufacturing sector relative to that of the United States after 1996 was due to lower MFP growth in the computer and electronic products industry. The slower growth in capital-labour ratio in the Canadian manufacturing compared with the United States after 1996 is related to the changes in relative prices of capital and labour inputs in the two countries.


Canada's Productivity Performance

Canada's Productivity Performance
Author: Ponugoti Someshwar Rao
Publisher: Canada Communications Group
Total Pages: 88
Release: 1992
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

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This study discuses issues and problems associated with international productivity and real income comparisons. It reviews the trends in Canada's productivity and the trends in Canada's labour productivity and real income performance, relative to other G-7 countries with special reference to the United States. It also outlines the theoretical underpinnings of an econometric model to explain productivity growth and gives a brief summary of regression results for Canada, the United States, Japan, and West Germany. It analyzes the causes of the slowdown in Canadian productivity since 1973 using the estimated equations. In addition, it examines the reasons for Canada's poor manufacturing productivity performance relative to that of the major economies and summarizes the findings of the study.


A Comparison of Canadian and U.S. Productivity Levels

A Comparison of Canadian and U.S. Productivity Levels
Author: John R. Baldwin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 52
Release: 2009
Genre:
ISBN:

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This paper examines the level of labour productivity in Canada relative to that of the United States in 1999. In doing so, it addresses two main issues. The first is the comparability of the measures of GDP and labour inputs that the statistical agency in each country produces. Second, it investigates how a price index can be constructed to reconcile estimates of Canadian and U.S. GDP per hour worked that are calculated in Canadian and U.S. dollars respectively. After doing so, and taking into account alternative assumptions about Canada/U.S. prices, the paper provides point estimates of Canada's relative labour productivity of the total economy in 1999 of around 94% that of the United States. The paper points out that at least a 10 percentage point confidence interval should be applied to these estimates. The size of the range is particularly sensitive to assumptions that are made about import and export prices.