Feature article
1. Do Canadians Pay More than Americans for the Same Products?
by J. Baldwin and B. Yan*
Introduction
Successive rounds of trade negotiations that culminated with the
Free Trade Agreement between Canada and the US in 1989 have led
to the increasing integration of the economies of the two countries.
One indicator of the degree of integration is the extent to which
Canadian prices are similar to those in the US.
In a perfectly integrated, competitive North American market, identical internationally
traded products should sell for the same common-currency price in each country,
thereby obeying the so-called ‘Law of One Price’. Exceptions may
occur to this rule, since differences in productivity, cost, and market power
may result in price differences across countries. Moreover, some products, notably
services, are not generally traded as much as goods are, so their prices are
likely to disobey the ‘Law of One Price’.
One may therefore expect that the purchasing power of a Canadian
and a US dollar depends on the product being purchased and the
degree of integration of the two economies. In this paper, we ask
how the level of Canadian prices differs from their US counterparts
across different product groups and how the difference has evolved
over time.
Data Sources
The data used come from our Purchasing Power Parity program. It
contains more than 160 bilateral commodity prices over five benchmark
years (1985, 1990, 1993, 1996 and 1999). To make the data more
comparable, we concentrate on products in the business sector and
exclude government expenditures. This results in a set of 168 goods
and services for the first four years and 165 for 1999 (the classification
system is slightly different between the first four years and 1999).
Goods and services are classified into three groups: homogenous tradables,
differentiated tradables and non-tradables. In general, products that are
not easily shipped across borders (such as construction, services and utilities)
are classified as non-tradables. Products that can flow relatively freely
across borders are classified as tradables. Within tradables, those that
are more standardized (such as food products like flour) are grouped together
as homogenous tradables, and those that are relatively more heterogeneous
in nature (such as machinery and equipment) are defined as differentiated
tradables.1
Price level differences are examined using the ratio of prices in the two countries,
where prices are expressed in the same currency-in this case, the US dollar.
The comparative price level (CPL) measures the degree to which one country’s
price level is above or below the other’s. For example, for a kilo of
rice costing 2.49 ($US) in the US and 2.99 ($Can) in Canada and an exchange
rate of 70 cents (US) the CPL is 0.84 ((2.99×0.7)/2.49), implying a price
level in Canada 16% lower than in the US.
If the Canadian price was 3.52($Can), then the CPL would be 1.0
((3.52 x 0.7)/2.49). In this case, there is no gain to be made
from arbitrage. If trade removed price differences, an appreciation
in the exchange rate (from 0.7 to 1.0) would be accompanied by
a fall in the Canadian price from 3.52 to 2.49 and the CPL would
remain at 1.0. If Canadian prices do not fully adjust downward
to an upward movement in the exchange rate, the Canadian price
(expressed in US dollars) would rise relative to the US price.
If arbitrage equated the two prices quickly, a change in the exchange
rate would be accompanied by no change in the relative price (CPL).
In this case, the correlation between changes in the exchange rate
and the CPL would be zero. When there is no reaction of the Canadian
price to the exchange rate, the correlation between changes in
the exchange rate and the CPL would be1.0.
Comparative Price Levels by Product Group
The median comparative price levels for each of the three product
groups over the five years are shown in Table 1 (all tables are
presented with the US as the reference country). For products that
can flow relatively freely across borders, prices were on average
3% more expensive in Canada than in the US. For products that are
not easily traded across borders, such as services, prices were
on average 8% cheaper in Canada. The latter probably reflects the
fact that services are labour intensive to produce, and Canadian
wages are lower than American wages.
The price differences for both tradables and nontradables are statistically
significant.2 However, for highly standardized homogenous tradables, prices
were only 2% more expensive in Canada than in the US, a statistically insignificant
difference. This is consistent with the argument that competitive pressures
tend to equalize prices for identical products.
Table 1: Median Comparative Price Level by Product Group (US=1.0)
Group |
Number of |
Comparative |
Price Difference |
|
Observations |
Price Level |
in % |
|
|
|
|
Tradable |
599 |
1.03 |
3 |
Homogeneous Tradable |
344 |
1.02 |
2 |
Differentiated Tradable |
255 |
1.04 |
4 |
Non-Tradable |
232 |
0.92 |
-8 |
Changes in Comparative Price Levels Over Time
One of the factors that affect the comparative price levels is
the exchange rate. In the short-run, prices in Canada may not respond
to exchange rate movements
for a number of reasons. For one thing, prices reflect both the cost of the
manufactured good and the sellers’ margin. This margin is not tradable
to the same degree as manufacturing products. Therefore Canadian prices may
not respond immediately to fluctuations in the exchange rate. In these cases,
movements in the CPL will be correlated with currency changes.
As noted, if prices in Canada do not respond immediately to an
appreciation of the exchange rate by declining, the CPL (Canadian
prices expressed in US dollars divided by US prices) will move
up. If Canadian prices do not move up in proportion to a depreciation
in the exchange rate, the comparative price level will move down.
If Canadian prices adjust proportionately to exchange rate changes,
there will be no change in the CPL.
The exchange rate between Canada and the US has undergone several long-term
movements during the last twenty years. Our dollar depreciated relative to
the US dollar from 1980 to 1986, followed by an appreciation from 1986 to 1991.
Since 1991, the Canadian dollar declined steadily from 87 cents (US) to only
64 cents in 2002.
Changes in the exchange rate are reflected in the movement of the comparative
price level of the two countries. Table 2 and Figure 1 show that the median
comparative price levels followed movements in the exchange rate. This means
that as the Canadian dollar appreciated, our products became relatively more
expensive than those in the US (expressed in a common currency). For example,
when the Canadian dollar appreciated in the late 1980s, the median price in
Canada for all products used in this study increased from being 5% less expensive
than in the US in 1985 to 10% more expensive in 1990. Despite the depreciation
of our dollar after 1991, the purchasing power of Canadian consumers nevertheless
has improved. By 1999, the overall median price in Canada was 11% lower than
the US counterpart. This difference was 14% for homogenous tradables, 4% for
differentiated tradables and 20% for non-tradables.
Figure 1
Table 2 Median Comparative Price Level by Commodity Group over time (US=1.0)
|
1985 |
1990 |
1993 |
1996 |
1999 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tradables |
|
|
|
|
|
Comparative Price Level |
0.98 |
1.14 |
1.09 |
1.02 |
0.93 |
Price Difference (%) |
-2 |
14 |
9 |
2 |
-7 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Homogeneous Tradables |
|
|
|
|
|
Comparative Price Level |
0.98 |
1.13 |
1.07 |
1.01 |
0.86 |
Price Difference (%) |
-2 |
13 |
7 |
1 |
-14 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Differentiated Tradables |
|
|
|
|
|
Comparative Price Level |
0.98 |
1.15 |
1.11 |
1.03 |
0.96 |
Price Difference (%) |
-2 |
15 |
11 |
3 |
-4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-tradables |
|
|
|
|
|
Comparative Price Level |
0.83 |
1.01 |
0.98 |
0.89 |
0.80 |
Price Difference (%) |
-17 |
1 |
-2 |
-11 |
-20 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Products |
|
|
|
|
|
Median |
0.95 |
1.10 |
1.04 |
0.99 |
0.89 |
Price differences (%) |
-5 |
10 |
4 |
-1 |
-11 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exchange Rate |
0.73 |
0.86 |
0.78 |
0.73 |
0.67 |
The correlation between changes in the comparative price level
and exchange rate movements varies for individual items. For example,
movements in the CPL for non-tradables like hairdressers, rents
and the water supply largely reflect exchange rate movements, with
a correlation of 0.81, 0.93 and 0.98, respectively (Figure 2).
Canadian prices (expressed in Canadian dollars) do not respond
to exchange rate movements and therefore the CPL (expressed in
US dollars) almost completely reflects movements in the exchange
rate.
Figure 2
Changes in the CPL for items such as autos and coffee partly
reflect exchange rate fluctuations (Figure 3). For example, in
1985 it cost 9% less to buy a vehicle in Canada than in the US.
By 1990, however, it had become 15% more expensive in Canada, following
a period when the Canadian dollar appreciated. By 1999, after the
steady depreciation in the Canadian dollar, it had become 13% less
expensive. The correlation between exchange rate changes and changes
in the CPL is 0.80 for coffee and 0.70 for autos. They are less
than for the three non-tradable examples, but still high.
Figure 3
It should be noted that changes in the CPL for both homogeneous
and non-homogeneous tradables did not move by as much as the exchange
rate. The size of the movement that occurs in the CPL as exchange
rates fluctuate might be taken as a measure of the degree to which
price discrimination developed in the two markets. The greater
the movement in the CPL, the greater is the differential that develops
between US and Canadian prices (expressed in the same currency).
It is therefore noteworthy that the differential widened more in
the homogeneous rather than the differentiated sectors by 1999.
Conclusion
It is important to be able to assess and evaluate how our economy
compares with that of our major trading partner. We examined
the purchasing power of Canadian consumers relative to their
American counterparts in order to assess the degree of integration
between the markets of the two countries.
Based on more than 160 product price data for the five years under study, we
find that on average there were no significant price differences between the
two countries for highly standardized products that flow relatively freely
across borders.
There were, however, subsets with significant differences. Over
the period under study, Canadian consumers on average paid 4% more
on highly differentiated tradable products, but 8% less for products
that are not easily traded across borders, such as services. Given
the size of the service sector, their lower price in Canada plays
an important role in determining our standard of living compared
with the US.
Shifts in comparative price levels between the two countries
generally reflected fluctuations in the exchange rate. Canadian
prices, especially for tradable goods, may reflect US prices in
the long run, but they react slowly to exchange rate movements.
There is a lag in adaptation of Canadian prices to US prices when
expressed in similar currencies.
Notes
* Micro-Economic Analysis Division (613) 951-8588.
1 The grouping scheme is based on professional judgement and discriminant
analysis (that utilizes information such as the Grubel intra-industry
trade index, the intensity of advertisement, and the number of
commodities within each product group) to capture the extent to
which products fall into the homogeneous or differentiated class.
2 At the 1% confidence level.
|