Walter Steingress
Principal Researcher
- PhD in Economics, Université de Montréal, Canada (2014)
- Master of Arts in Economics, Boston University, USA (2010)
- Master of Science (Magister) in Computer Science and Business Administration, University of Vienna, Austria (2005)
Bio
Walter Steingress is a Principal Researcher in the Canadian Economic Studies Division. His research interest lies in International Economics, with a particular emphasis on international migration and international trade. Prior to his tenure at the Bank of Canada, Walter was a Research Economist at the Bank of France. He has been a visiting and adjunct faculty member at Paris School of Economics, Syracuse University, University of Rochester, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In 2019, the Canadian Economic Association awarded him the Robert Mundell Prize. Walter earned his PhD from the University of Montreal and holds a master’s degree from Boston University.
Staff research
The arrival of immigrants increases demand for housing and puts upward pressure on shelter prices. Using instrumental variables based on the ancestry composition of residents in US counties, we estimate the causal impact of immigration on local shelter prices.
Immigration and Provision of Public Goods: Evidence at the Local Level in the U.S.
Using U.S. county-level data from 1990 to 2010, we study the causal impact of immigration on the provision of local public goods. We uncover substantial heterogeneity across immigrants with different skills and immigrants of different generations, which leads to unequal fiscal effects across U.S. counties.
Exporting and Investment Under Credit Constraints
We examine the relationship between firms’ performance and credit constraints affecting export market entry. Using administrative Canadian firm-level data, our findings show that new exporters (a) increase their productivity, (b) raise their leverage ratio and (c) increase investment. We estimate that 48 percent of Canadian manufacturers face binding credit constraints when deciding whether to enter export markets.
Climate Variability and International Trade
This paper quantifies the impact of hurricanes on seaborne international trade to the United States. Matching the timing of hurricane–trade route intersections with monthly U.S. port-level trade data, we isolate the unanticipated effects of a hurricane hitting a trade route using two separate identification schemes: an event study and a local projection.
No Double Standards: Quantifying the Impact of Standard Harmonization on Trade
Product standards are omnipresent in industrialized societies. Though standardization can be beneficial for domestic producers, divergent product standards have been categorized as a major obstacle to international trade. This paper quantifies the effect of standard harmonization on trade flows and characterizes the extent to which it changes the cost and demand structure of exporting.
Estimating the Effect of Exchange Rate Changes on Total Exports
This paper shows that real effective exchange rate (REER) regressions, the standard approach for estimating the response of aggregate exports to exchange rate changes, imply biased estimates of the underlying elasticities. We provide a new aggregate regression specification that is consistent with bilateral trade flows micro-founded by the gravity equation.
Journal publications
- “Immigration and US Shelter Prices: The Role of Geographical and Immigrant Heterogeneity”
(with James Cabral), European Economic Review, vol. 182, February 2026. - “No Double Standards: Quantifying the Impact of Standard Harmonization on Trade”
(with Julia Schmidt), Journal of International Economics, vol. 137, July 2022. - “The Political Impact of Immigrants: Evidence from the United States”
(with Anna Maria Mayda and Giovanni Peri), American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, vol. 14(1), January 2022. - “Estimating the Effect of Exchange Rate Changes on Total Exports”
(with Thierry Mayer), Journal of International Money and Finance, vol. 106, September 2020. - “Global Trade Flows: Revisiting the Exchange Rate Elasticities”
(with Matthieu Bussière and Guillaume Gaulier), Open Economies Review, vol. 31, March 2020. - “Market Size and Entry in International Trade: product versus firm fixed cost”
Review of International Economics, vol. 27(5), July 2019. - “The Causal Impact of Migration on US Trade: Evidence from Political Refugees”
Canadian Journal of Economics, vol. 51(4), October 2018. - “Financial constraints in China: Firm-level evidence”
(with Sandra Poncet and Hylke Vandenbussche), China Economic Review, vol. 21(3), September 2010.