References

Warning View the most recent version.

Archived Content

Information identified as archived is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.

Baldwin, J.R., and P. Gorecki. 1986. The Role of Scale in Canada/U.S. Productivity Differences in the Manufacturing Sector: 1970-1979. Vol. 6 of Collected Research Studies. Research Program of the Royal Commission on the Economic Union and Development Prospects for Canada, Economic Council of Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Baldwin, J.R., D. Leung, and L. Rispoli. 2011. Labour Productivity of Unincorporated Sole Proprietorships and Partnerships: Impact on the Canada-United States Productivity Gap. Economic Analysis Research Paper Series, no. 71. Statistics Canada Catalogue No. 11F0027M. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Baldwin, J.R., D. Leung, and L. Rispoli, 2014. The Canada-U.S. Labour Producitivity Gap Across Firm Size Classes. Canadian Productivity Review, no 033. Statistics Canada. Catalogue no. 15-206-X. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Baldwin, J.R., J.P. Maynard, M. Tanguay, F. Wong, and B. Yan. 2005. A Comparison of Canadian and U.S. Productivity Levels: An Exploration of Measurement Issues. Economic Analysis Research Paper Series, no. 28. Statistics Canada Catalogue No. 11F0027M. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Davis. S.J., and M. Henrikson 1999. “Explaining National Differences in the Size and Industry Distribution of Employment.”Small Business Economics 12 (1): 59–83.

Kanagarajah, S. 2005. Business Dynamics in Canada, 2001. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 61-534-X1E. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Kobe, K. 2007. The Small Business Share of GDP, 1998-2004. Economic Consulting Services, LLC UC Berkeley. Washington, D.C.: Office of Advocacy, United States Small Business Administration. Contract number SBAHQ-05-M-0413.

Kobe, K. 2012. Small Business GDP: Update 2002-2010. Economic Consulting Services, LLC UC Berkeley. Washington, D.C.: Office of Advocacy, United States Small Business Administration. Contract number SBAHQ-10-M-0258.

Kumar, K.B., R.G. Rajan, and L. Zingales. 1999. What Determines Firm Size? NBER Working Paper Series, no. 7208. Cambridge: Massachusetts. National Bureau of Economic Research.

Leung, D., C. Meh, and Y. Terajima. 2008. “Productivity in Canada: Does Firm Size Matter?”Bank of Canada Review. Autumn. 5–14.

Leung, D., and L. Rispoli. 2011. The Contribution of Small and Medium-Sized Business to Gross Domestic Product: A Canadian–United States Comparison. Economic Analysis Research Paper Series, no. 70. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 11F0027M. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Leung, D., and L. Rispoli. 2012. Small, Medium-sized, and Large Businesses in the Canadian Economy: Measuring Their Contribution to Gross Domestic Product from 2001 to 2008. Economic Analysis Research Paper Series, no. 82. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 11F0027M. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Leung, D., Rispoli, L., and R. Gibson 2011. Small, Medium-Sized and Large Businesses in the Canadian Economy: Measuring Their Contribution to Gross Domestic Product in 2005. Economic Analysis Research Paper Series, no. 69. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 11F0027M. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Morissette, R. 1993. “Canadian Jobs and Firm Size: Do Smaller Firms Pay Less?”Canadian Journal of Economics 26 (1): 159–174.

Rao, S., Tang, J., and Wang, W. 2004. “Measuring the Canada-U.S. Productivity Gap: Industry Dimensions.”International Productivity Monitor (9): 3–14.

Rispoli, L. 2009. Measuring the Contribution of the Unincorporated Sector in the Canadian Economy, 1997 to 2002. Insights on the Canadian Economy, no. 23. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 11-624-M. Ottawa: Statistics Canada.

Date modified: