Working
Paper 02-8
by Michael W. Klein, Scott
Schuh, and Robert
K. Triest
This paper is chapter 7 in our monograph, Job Creation,
Job Destruction, and International Competition (W.E.
Upjohn Institute for Employment Research 2003). The
chapter, which expands on the ideas advanced in Klein,
Schuh, and Triest (2003), is a case study of the impact
of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) on
the U.S. labor market in three industries: textiles
and apparel, chemicals, and automobiles. NAFTA significantly
altered the trade environment for these industries and
contributed to changes in the bilateral export-import
structure among the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
Our innovation is to examine NAFTA’s effect on
gross job creation and destruction, the components of
change in net employment. Except for a more rapid decline
in apparel employment, there is little evidence of NAFTA’s
having had major effects on either net employment or
gross job flows in these industries.
JEL classification codes: F4, J6
Keywords: gross job flows, openness, international
trade, NAFTA, real exchange rates
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