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The Long and Short of the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement
1K
Citations
31
References
2004
Year
Trade CostsApplied EconomicsInternational EconomicsTradeEconomic IntegrationEducationPlant-level Labor ProductivityIndustrial OrganizationUnique WindowFree TradeProductivityEconomic AnalysisCommercial PolicyReciprocal Trade AgreementEconomicsPublic PolicyInternational RelationsLabor EconomicsTrade AgreementsTrade WarsTrade PolicyProtectionismEconomic PolicyTrade EconomicsBusinessLabor Market Impact
The Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement provides a unique window onto the effects of a reciprocal trade agreement on an industrialized economy (Canada). For industries that experienced the deepest Canadian tariff cuts, the contraction of low-productivity plants reduced employment by 12 percent while raising industry-level labor productivity by 15 percent. For industries that experienced the largest U.S. tariff cuts, plant-level labor productivity soared by 14 percent. These results highlight the conflict between those who bore the short-run adjustment costs (displaced workers and struggling plants) and those who are garnering the long-run gains (consumers and efficient plants).
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