(as bibtex)
162 references. 1997-2002
Volumes
1997. Volume
22.
Issues:
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
_
1998. Volume
23.
Issues:
3
,
4
,
_
1999. Volume
24.
Issues:
_
2000. Volume
25.
Issues:
4
,
_
2001. Volume
26.
Issues:
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
2002. Volume
27.
Issues:
1
,
2
Recent Articles
-
Peracchi, Franco.
The European Community Household Panel: A review.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:63-90
-
Tomljanovich, Marc, Vogelsang, Timothy J..
Are U.S. regions converging? Using new econometric methods to examine old issues.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:49-62
-
Holt, Matthew T., Bishop, Richard C..
A semiflexible normalized quadratic inverse demand system: An application to the price formation of fish.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:23-47
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Coe, Patrick J..
Power issues when testing the Markov switching model with the sup likelihood ratio test using U.S. output.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:395-401
-
Klaassen, Franc.
Improving GARCH volatility forecasts with regime-switching GARCH.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:363-394
-
Schaller, Huntley, van Norden, Simon.
Fads or bubbles?.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:335-362
-
Soledad, Maria, Peria, Martinez.
A regime-switching approach to the study of speulative attacks: A focus on EMS crises.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:299-334
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Kaufmann, Sylvia.
Is there an asymmetric effect of monetary policy over time? A Bayesian analysis uing Austrian data.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:277-297
-
Mills, Terence C., Wang, Ping.
Plucking models of business cycle fluctutations: Evidence from the G-7 countries.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:255-276
-
Krolzig, Hans-Martin, Marcellino, Massimiliano, Mizon, Grayham E..
A Markov-switching vector equilibrium correction model of the UK labour market.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:233-254
-
Chauvet, Marcelle, Juhn, Chinhui, Potter, Simon.
Markov switching in disaggregate unemployment rates.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:205-232
-
Bontempi, Maria Elena.
The dynamic specification of the modified pecking order theory: Its relevance to Italy.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:1-22
-
Clements, Michael P., Krolzig, Hans-Martin.
Can oil shocks explain asymmetries in the U.S. business cycle?.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:185-204
-
Kim, Chang-Jin, Murray, Christian J..
Permanent and transitory components of recession.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:163-183
-
Hamilton, James D., Raj, Baldev.
New directions in business cycle research and financial analysis.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:149-162
-
Kniesner, Thomas J., Li, Qi.
Nonlinearity in dynamic adjustment: Semiparametric estimation of panel labor supply.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:131-148
-
Smets, Frank.
Output gap uncertainty: Does it matter for the Taylor rule?.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:113-129
-
Czarnitzki, Dirk, Stadtmann, Georg.
Uncertainty of outcome versus reputation: Empirical evidence for the first German football division.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:101-112
-
Ho, Tsung-Wu.
A panel cointegration approach to the investment-saving correlation.
Empirical Economics
2002.
27:91-100
-
Fitzenberger, Bernd, Hujer, Reinhard, MaCurdy, Thomas E., Schnabel, Reinhold.
Testing for uniform wage trends in West Germany: A cohort analysis using quantile regressions for censored data.
Empirical Economics
2001.
26:41-86
-
Leung, Siu Fai, Yu, Shihti.
The sensitivity of the RESET tests to disturbance autocorrelation in regression analysis.
Empirical Economics
2001.
26:721-726
-
Fertig, Michael.
The economic impact of EU-enlargement: Assessing the migration potential.
Empirical Economics
2001.
26:707-720
-
Stavrev, Emil.
A small continuous time macro-econometric model of the Czech Republic.
Empirical Economics
2001.
26:673-705
-
Caruso, Massimo.
Stock prices and money velocity: A multi-country analysis.
Empirical Economics
2001.
26:651-672
-
Camarero, Mariam, Ordóñez, Javier.
Who is ruling Europe? Empirical evidence on the German dominance hypothesis.
Empirical Economics
2001.
26:623-650