Institution
Government of Canada
Government•Ottawa, Ontario, Canada•
About: Government of Canada is a government organization based out in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Monetary policy & Productivity. The organization has 796 authors who have published 886 publications receiving 21366 citations. The organization is also known as: federal government of Canada & Her Majesty's Government.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of low-income countries' access to cross-border bank lending and bond issuance in the international market over the past few decades, highlighting some stylized facts that characterize salient features of low income countries' experience in external borrowing from the private sector and discusses the various factors that influence governments' and corporations' decisions to seek external financing along with creditors' decision to provide the financing.
Abstract: Private debt flows to developing countries surged to record levels over the period 2003-07. A few low-income countries have gained access to the international bond market but the bulk of the flows have continued to go to just a few large middle-income countries. Most low-income countries still heavily depend on concessional loans and grants from the official sector to meet their financing needs. The paper provides an overview of low-income countries' access to cross-border bank lending and bond issuance in the international market over the past few decades. It highlights some stylized facts that characterize salient features of low-income countries' experience in external borrowing from the private sector and discusses the various factors that influence governments' and corporations' decisions to seek external financing along with creditors' decisions to provide the financing. The paper concludes by assessing the prospects for low-income countries' access to private debt markets over the medium term.
9 citations
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TL;DR: This paper examined how Canadian manufacturing plants have responded to reductions in tariff barriers between Canada and the rest of the world over the past two decades and identified the presence of three main mechanisms through which export-market participation raises productivity growth among plants: learning by exporting, exposure to international competition, and increases in product specialization.
Abstract: The paper examines how Canadian manufacturing plants have responded to reductions in tariff barriers between Canada and the rest of world over the past two decades. Three main conclusions emerge from the analysis. First, trade liberalization was a significant factor behind the strong export growth of the Canadian manufacturing sector. As trade barriers fell, more Canadian plants entered the export market and existing exporters increased their share of shipments sold abroad. Second, export-market participation was associated with increases in a plant's productivity growth. Third, our analysis identified the presence of three main mechanisms through which export-market participation raises productivity growth among plants: learning by exporting; exposure to international competition; and increases in product specialization that allowed for exploitation of scale economies. Our evidence also shows that plants that move into export markets increase investments in R&D and training to develop capacities for absorbing foreign technologies and international best practices. Finally, entering export markets leads to increases in the number of advanced technologies being used, increases in foreign sourcing for advanced technologies and improvements in the information available to firms about advanced technologies. It is also associated with improvements in the novelty of the innovations that are introduced.
9 citations
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TL;DR: The RADARSAT Constellation Mission (RCM) as discussed by the authors is a Canadian Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) mission, providing C-band SAR data continuity of the RADARSat-1 and RADARS-2 satellite missions.
Abstract: The RADARSAT Constellation Mission (RCM) is a Canadian Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) mission, providing C-band SAR data continuity of the RADARSAT-1 and RADARSAT-2 satellite missions. The RCM whic...
9 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured Canada's regional integration in manufacturing industries with that of the United States, and examined the regional impact of growing trade integration on productivity growth and select other economic performance variables.
Abstract: This paper relates to two understudied, but increasingly important concerns: the measurement of regional integration, and the regional benefits to North American economic integration. The objective is to measure Canada's regional integration in manufacturing industries with that of the United States, and examine the regional impact of growing trade integration on productivity growth and select other economic performance variables. Our research shows that Canada and each of its regions are becoming more integrated in trade in manufactures with the United States-but Ontario is much more integrated than the rest of Canada. While all regions have benefited through improved productivity performance, higher wages and higher output growth, Ontario has been the principal beneficiary. No evidence was found that increased trade integration in manufactures with the United States caused anything more than short-run adjustment losses in employment. Canada and each of its regions have expanded their share of North American manufacturing which stands in sharp contrast to the supposition that it would be the United States that would experience a growth in North American production share (Krugman, 1980).
9 citations
Authors
Showing all 802 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kingston H. G. Mills | 92 | 313 | 29630 |
David W. Schindler | 85 | 217 | 39792 |
Martha C. Anderson | 70 | 340 | 20288 |
Hui Li | 62 | 246 | 14395 |
Lei Zhang | 58 | 146 | 21872 |
Michael J. Vanni | 55 | 124 | 11714 |
Cars Hommes | 54 | 250 | 14984 |
Richard E. Caves | 53 | 115 | 24552 |
John W. M. Rudd | 51 | 70 | 9446 |
Karen A. Kidd | 47 | 163 | 10255 |
Kenneth O. Hill | 43 | 126 | 8842 |
Steven H. Ferguson | 43 | 225 | 6797 |
Derwyn C. Johnson | 41 | 103 | 8208 |
Kevin E. Percy | 40 | 91 | 5167 |
Guy Ampleman | 40 | 128 | 4706 |