We build a unique industry-level panel data set to estimate border effects with respect to U.S.- Canada trade for each year from 1992 to 2005. Estimates from data aggregated at the province/state level yield border effects in the early 1990s that increase slightly and then decline after the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), but significantly increase after 2001. Results based on three digit NAICS level data reveal higher border effects in the early 1990s and considerable heterogeneity across industries. These results imply that the tragic events of 9/11 had considerable adverse impacts for U.S.-Canada trade
Wincoop (2003) estimate what trade between US states and Canadian provinces would have been if the b...
After the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement and North American Free Trade Agreement were signed. Trade ...
This paper examines, for the first time, the trade and FDI impacts of a North American Security Peri...
The paper builds a unique industry-level panel data set to estimate the border effects associated wi...
The paper examines the data for Canadian exports to the United States that have been cited as prima ...
Following the terror attacks on the United States in September 2001, the country briefly closed all ...
N THE FIRST PART OF THE STUDY, we review and discuss the recent evolution of the literature on borde...
The 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington have had profound global economic and politica...
We revisit the effect of the U.S.-Canada national border on trade, considering to what extent the bo...
The Border Policy Research Institute (BPRI) was established in 2005 in order to examine processes an...
In recent years, private sector managers in both Canada and the United States have expressed concern...
This inaugural Border Barometer provides a preliminary context for officials to consider when thinki...
This paper examines the behavior of transportation costs associated with U.S. imports from Canada. I...
Since McCallum’s (1995) finding of surprisingly high border effect on trade between US and Canada, t...
This paper reexamines the evidence on the border effect, the finding that the border drives a wedge ...
Wincoop (2003) estimate what trade between US states and Canadian provinces would have been if the b...
After the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement and North American Free Trade Agreement were signed. Trade ...
This paper examines, for the first time, the trade and FDI impacts of a North American Security Peri...
The paper builds a unique industry-level panel data set to estimate the border effects associated wi...
The paper examines the data for Canadian exports to the United States that have been cited as prima ...
Following the terror attacks on the United States in September 2001, the country briefly closed all ...
N THE FIRST PART OF THE STUDY, we review and discuss the recent evolution of the literature on borde...
The 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington have had profound global economic and politica...
We revisit the effect of the U.S.-Canada national border on trade, considering to what extent the bo...
The Border Policy Research Institute (BPRI) was established in 2005 in order to examine processes an...
In recent years, private sector managers in both Canada and the United States have expressed concern...
This inaugural Border Barometer provides a preliminary context for officials to consider when thinki...
This paper examines the behavior of transportation costs associated with U.S. imports from Canada. I...
Since McCallum’s (1995) finding of surprisingly high border effect on trade between US and Canada, t...
This paper reexamines the evidence on the border effect, the finding that the border drives a wedge ...
Wincoop (2003) estimate what trade between US states and Canadian provinces would have been if the b...
After the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement and North American Free Trade Agreement were signed. Trade ...
This paper examines, for the first time, the trade and FDI impacts of a North American Security Peri...