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David Dupuis
David Dupuis
Bank of Canada
1501 McGill College Avenue, Suite 2030
Montréal, QC H3A 3M8

David Dupuis

About David Dupuis

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Bank of Canada publications

  1. A Model of Housing Stock for Canada

    Working Paper 2010-19 - David Dupuis, Yi Zheng

    Using an error-correction model (ECM) framework, the authors attempt to quantify the degree of disequilibrium in Canadian housing stock over the period 1961–2008 for the national aggregate and over 1981–2008 for the provinces.

    Topics: Domestic demand and components
  2. Relative Price Movements and Labour Productivity in Canada: A VAR Analysis

    Discussion Paper 2010-5 - Michael Dolega, David Dupuis, Lise Pichette

    In recent years, the Canadian economy has been affected by strong movements in relative prices brought about by the surging costs of energy and non-energy commodities, with significant implications for the terms of trade, the exchange rate, and the allocation of resources across Canadian sectors and regions.

    Topics: Labour markets; Productivity; Recent economic and financial developments
  3. Computing the Accuracy of Complex Non-Random Sampling Methods: The Case of the Bank of Canada's Business Outlook Survey

    Working Paper 2009-10 - Daniel de Munnik, David Dupuis, Mark Illing

    A number of central banks publish their own business conditions survey based on non-random sampling methods. The results of these surveys influence monetary policy decisions and thus affect expectations in financial markets. To date, however, no one has computed the statistical accuracy of these surveys because their respective non-random sampling method renders this assessment non-trivial.

    Topics: Central bank research; Econometric and statistical methods; Regional economic developments
  4. The Effects of Recent Relative Price Movements on the Canadian Economy

    Although the standard of living of Canadians has improved as a result of terms-of-trade gains created by the sharp rise in real commodity prices over the past five years or so, the commodity-price increase, combined with an exchange rate appreciation and real income gain, triggered structural adjustments by altering underlying economic incentives. The frictions generated in adjusting to the relative price shock have likely contributed to hold back aggregate productivity growth. Dupuis and Marcil examine the structural adjustments that have been required-in particular, the resource reallocation among the different sectors of the economy-and its effects on employment, output, and productivity, as well as the responses of final domestic demand and external trade flows.

    Topics: Productivity; Recent economic and financial developments
  5. Forecasting Canadian GDP: Region-Specific versus Countrywide Information

    Working Paper 2005-31 - Frédérick Demers, David Dupuis

    The authors investigate whether the aggregation of region-specific forecasts improves upon the direct forecasting of Canadian GDP growth.

    Topics: Econometric and statistical methods
  6. The New Keynesian Hybrid Phillips Curve: An Assessment of Competing Specifications for the United States

    Working Paper 2004-31 - David Dupuis

    Inflation forecasting is fundamental to monetary policy. In practice, however, economists are faced with competing goals: accuracy and theoretical consistency.

    Topics: Economic models; Inflation and prices
  7. The U.S. Stock Market and Fundamentals: A Historical Decomposition

    Working Paper 2003-20 - David Dupuis, David Tessier

    The authors identify the fundamentals behind the dynamics of the U.S. stock market over the past 30 years. They specify a structural vector-error-correction model following the methodology of King, Plosser, Stock, and Watson (1991).

    Topics: Financial markets
  8. Une analyse empirique du lien entre la productivité et le taux de change réel Canada-É-U

    Working Paper 2000-22 - David Dupuis, David Tessier

    The relative productivity gap between Canada and the United States is a controversial subject matter. One argument especially contentious in this debate stems from the belief that the gradual depreciation of the Canadian dollar over the last 20 years has been one of the determinants of the productivity gap. In fact, the exchange rate depreciation [...]

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Publications

Other Publications

  • “Assessing the Accuracy of Non-Random Business Conditions Surveys: A Novel Approach.”
    (with D. de Munnik and M. Illing), Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A.
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