Ben Tomlin
Bank of Canada
20 Papers
56 Citations
Ben Tomlin is an academic researcher from Bank of Canada. The author has contributed to research in topics: Exchange rate & Currency. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 20 publications. Previous affiliations of Ben Tomlin include Government of Canada.
Chat about Author
Papers
Importers and exporters in exchange rate pass-through and currency invoicing
TL;DR: This paper explored the role of product market structure on exchange rate pass-through and currency of invoicing in international trade, using very detailed transaction-level data on Canadian imports over a six-year period.
127
Exchange Rate Pass-Through, Currency of Invoicing and Market Share
TL;DR: This article analyzed l'effet de la structure de marche sur le choix du degre de transmission des variations du taux de change and la monnaie de facturation retenue dans les echanges internationaux.
Exchange Rate Fluctuations, Plant Turnover and Productivity
TL;DR: In this paper, a structural model that captures the effect of plant-level productivity and real exchange rate fluctuations on plant entry and exit decisions, and how this, in turn, affects average industry productivity is developed.
37
•Posted Content
Measuring Potential Output at the Bank of Canada: The Extended Multivariate Filter and the Integrated Framework
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a method to estimate the difference between the production effective and the production potentielle, soit the difference entre the two types of production.
Pricing-to-market, currency invoicing and exchange rate pass-through to producer prices
Shutao Cao,Wei Dong,Ben Tomlin +2 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine producer prices to shed light on a number of outstanding issues in the understanding of price adjustment in the face of fluctuating exchange rates and show that there is significant within-and across-industry heterogeneity in the currency of invoice of exports of Canadian goods to the U.S. and, further, the degree of pass-through to producer prices.
18