Working Paper 99-11
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
Revised article forthcoming in Journal
of International Economics.
This paper contributes to an understanding of internationally
generated adjustment costs by demonstrating a statistically
significant and economically relevant effect of the
real exchange rate on job creation and job destruction
in U.S. manufacturing industries over the period 1973
to 1993. The responsiveness of these gross job flows
to the real exchange rate reflects pervasive heterogeneity
with respect to international conditions across firms,
even within narrowly defined industries. We document
this heterogeneity and show that the responsiveness
of job flows to movements in the real exchange rate
varies with the industry's openness to international
trade. We also show an asymmetry in the responsiveness
of job flows to the real exchange rate; appreciations
play a significant role in job destruction, but job
flows do not respond significantly to dollar depreciations.
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