68th International Atlantic Economic Conference

October 08 - 11, 2009 | Boston, USA

Does Productivity Respond to Exchange Rate Appreciations?

Sunday, October 11, 2009: 11:15 AM
Yao Tang, Ph.D. , Economics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Although real currency appreciations pose direct difficulties for exporters and import-competing firms as they will face more intense competition, is it possible that such competition spurs firms to improve productivity? To answer this question, the paper first constructs a theoretical model to show how the competitive pressures of currency appreciations induce firms to improve productivity by adopting new technologies. In addition, the model predicts that during appreciations there will be a positive relation between market concentration and improvements in productivity for industries highly exposed to trade, because the marginal benefits of productivity improvement will be bigger for firms with a larger market share. The paper then examines Canadian manufacturing data from 1997 to 2006, and finds evidence consistent with model predictions. I find that growth rates of labour productivity were on average higher during the Canadian dollar appreciation between 2002 and 2006, after controlling for industry characteristics and macroeconomic factors. Within the group of highly traded Canadian industries, the more concentrated ones experienced larger growth in labour productivity.