Study: Empirical evidence from Canadian firm-level data on the relationship between trade and productivity performance
Archived Content
Information identified as archived is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.
Released: 2015-06-16
Canada's productivity performance has mirrored changes in Canada's trading environment that have facilitated or hindered access by Canadian manufacturers to export markets. To better understand this link, Statistics Canada has conducted a set of studies that investigated whether and how changes in the trading environment contributed to productivity growth in the manufacturing sector.
A new research paper, "Empirical Evidence from Canadian Firm-level Data on the Relationship Between Trade and Productivity Performance," provides an overview of the key Canadian empirical findings, focusing on studies that analyze how the manufacturing sector adapted following trade liberalizations in the 1990s and the sharp currency appreciation in the post-2000 period.
A common theme emerging from the firm-level research is that adapting to new larger markets, whether domestic or foreign, is beneficial to productivity growth. Larger markets raise productivity, by allowing firms to exploit economies of scale and/or product specialization, by encouraging firms to become more efficient in response to increases in competitive pressure and by offering firms more incentives and possibilities to invest in innovation.
The empirical evidence also suggests that learning-by-exporting takes place—learning from foreign buyers that allow exporters to benefit from the adoption of foreign technologies and to increase innovation.
The benefits from access to larger markets do not come automatically to all exporters. Plants that succeed are those that invest in advanced technologies, in research and development, and in training, all of which help to develop the capacity to learn and integrate international best practices.
Empirical results show that the reallocation of resources from less efficient to more efficient firms is another important source of the growth in productivity that has accompanied trade liberalization. Tariff reductions led the least productive firms to exit and the more productive ones to expand.
The size of trade-induced productivity gains is sometimes attenuated by movements in the exchange rate that change the competitiveness of exporters. Recent evidence highlights the challenges faced by the Canadian manufacturing sector, which made heavy investments in the 1990s to serve new US markets only to face a lower presence in this market a decade later, as the Canadian dollar sharply appreciated against the US dollar.
Note to readers
The studies reviewed in this paper use micro databases developed for research purposes at Statistics Canada's Canadian Centre for Data Development and Economic Research from sources such as the Annual Survey of Manufactures and Logging, the 1993 Survey of Innovation and Advanced Technologies and the Workplace and Employee Survey.
The research paper "Empirical Evidence from Canadian Firm-level Data on the Relationship Between Trade and Productivity Performance," part of the Economic Analysis Research Paper Series (Catalogue number11F0027M), is now available from the Browse by key resource module of our website under Publications.
Similar studies are also available in the Update on Economic Analysis module of our website.
Contact information
For more information, contact us (toll-free 1-800-263-1136; 514-283-8300; infostats@statcan.gc.ca).
To enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this release, contact Beiling Yan at (613-863-9796; beiling.yan@statcan.gc.ca), Economic Analysis Division.
Report a problem on this page
Is something not working? Is there information outdated? Can't find what you're looking for?
Please contact us and let us know how we can help you.
- Date modified: