Citations
Transcription
Citations
Citations Sumru G. Altug Professor of Economics Ko¸c University, Istanbul, Turkey, and Research Fellow, CEPR, London, U.K. March 2015 Abstract This document contains citations for my research papers. They are listed by publication or working paper. For my books and for selected articles, I have also included references on graduate teaching syllabi. The majority of the citations are from publications in the Social Science Citation Index (those marked with a “*”). However, there are also citations from lectures and books. “Time-to-Build and Aggregate Fluctuations: Some New Evidence.” International Economic Review 30 (1989), 889–920.1 1. Finn E. Kydland (1984). “Labor-Force Heterogeneity and the Business Cycle.” Carnegie– Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 21, 173–208. 2. James J. Heckman (1984). “Comments on the Ashenfelter and Kydland Papers.” Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 21, 209–224. 3. (*) Rajnish Mehra and Edward C. Prescott (1985). “The Equity Premium: A Puzzle.” Journal of Monetary Economics 15, 145–162. 4. (*) Colin Lawrence and Aloysius Siow (1985). “Interest Rates and Investment Spending: Some Empirical Evidence for Post–War U.S. Equipment, 1947–1980.” Journal of Business 58, 359–376. 5. Rodolfo Manuelli (1986). “Modern Business Cycle Analysis: A Guide to the Prescott– Summers Debate.” Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review 10, 3–8. 6. (*) Bennet T. McCallum (1986).“On ‘Real’ and ‘Sticky-Price’ Theories of the Business Cycle,”(A Money, Credit, and Banking Lecture). Journal of Money, Credit and Banking 18, 397–414. 7. (*) Martin Eichenbaum and Kenneth J. Singleton (1986). “Do Equilibrium Business Cycle Theories Explain Postwar U.S. Business Cycles?” NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1986, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 91–134. 8. Edward C. Prescott (1986). “Theory Ahead of Business Cycle Measurement.” Carnegie– Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 25, 11–44. 9. Robert E. Lucas, Jr. (1987). Models of Business Cycles (Yrho Jahnson Lectures), Oxford (Oxfordshire), New York: Basil Blackwell. 10. Robert M. Townsend (1987). “Arrow-Debreu Programs as Microfoundations for Macroeconomics.” in T. F. Bewley, editor, Advances in Economic Theory, Vol. 2, Cambridge University Press. 11. Thomas J. Sargent (1987). Macroeconomic Theory. 2nd ed., Boston: Academic Press, p. 284. 12. Michael Dotsey and Robert G. King (1987). “Business Cycles.” The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics. New York: Stockton Press. 13. (*) Martin S. Eichenbaum, Lars Peter Hansen and Kenneth J. Singleton (1988). “A Time Series Analysis of Representative Agent Models of Consumption and Leisure Choice Under Uncertainty.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 103, 51–78. 1 Revised version of “Gestation Lags and the Business Cycle,” 1984. 1 14. (*) Gary D. Hansen and Thomas J. Sargent (1988). “Straight Time and Overtime in Equilibrium.” Journal of Monetary Economics 21, 281–304. 15. (*) Kenneth J. Singleton (1988). “Econometric Issues in the Analysis of Equilibrium Business Cycle Models.” Journal of Monetary Economics 21, 361–386. 16. (*) Lawrence J. Christiano (1988). “Why Does Inventory Investment Fluctuate So Much?”, Journal of Monetary Economics 21, 247–280. 17. (*) Robert M. Townsend (1988). “Information Constrained Insurance: The Revelation Principle Extended.” Journal of Monetary Economics 21, 411–450. 18. Bennet T. McCallum (1989). “Real Business Cycle Models.” In Robert J. Barro, editor, Modern Business Cycle Theory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 16–50 19. (*) Bruce D. Smith (1989). “A Business Cycle Model With Private Information.” Journal of Labor Economics 7, 210–237. 20. (*) Charles Plosser (1989). “Understanding Real Business Cycles.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 3, 51–78. 21. (*) Bruce D. Smith (1989). “Unemployment, the Variability of Hours, and the Persistence of ‘Disturbances’: A Private Information Approach.” International Economic Review 30, 921–937. 22. (*) James H. Stock and Mark W. Watson (1989). “New Indexes of Coincident and Leading Economic Indicators.” NBER Macroeconomic Annual. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 351–393. 23. (*) Lawrence J. Christiano (1990).“Linear Quadratic Approximation and Value Function Iteration: A Comparison.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 8, 99– 113. 24. (*) Allan W. Gregory and Gregor W. Smith. (1991) “Calibration as Estimation.” Econometric Reviews 9, 57–89. 25. (*) Hiroshi Osano and Tohru Inoue (1991). “Testing Between Competing Models of Business Cycles.” International Economic Review 32, 669–688. 26. (*) Robert G. King, Charles I. Plosser, James H. Stock, and Mark W. Watson (1991). “Stochastic Trends and Economic Fluctuations,” American Economic Review, 81(4), pp. 819-840 27. (*) Charles L. Evans (1992). “Productivity Shocks and Real Business Cycles.” Journal of Monetary Economics 29, 191–208. 28. (*) Valerie Bencivenga (1992). “An Econometric Study of Hours and Output Variation with Preference Shocks.” International Economic Review 33, 449–471. 2 29. (*) Allan D. Brunner (1992). “Conditional Asymmetries in GNP: A Seminonparametric Approach.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 10, 65–72. 30. (*) Gregory C. Chow (1992). “Dynamic Optimization Without Dynamic Programming.” Economic Modelling 9, 3–9. 31. Ray C. Fair (1992). “The Cowles Commission Approach, Real Business Cycle Theories, and New Keynesian Economics” in Michael T. Belongia and Michelle R. Garfinkel, eds., The Business Cycle: Theories and Evidence, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1992, 133-147. 32. (*) Mark Watson (1993). “Measures of Fit for Calibrated Models.” Journal of Political Economy 101, 1011-1041. 33. (*) Robert S. Chirinko (1993). “Business Fixed Investment Spending: A Critical Survey of Modeling Strategies, Empirical Results, and Policy Implications.” Journal of Economic Literature 31, 1875–1911. 34. (*) A. Smith (1993). “Estimating Nonlinear Time-series Models Using Simulated Vector Autoregressions.” Journal of Applied Econometrics 8, S63–S84. 35. (*) G. M. Caporale (1993). “Productivity Shocks and Business Cycles.” Applied Economics 25, 1065–1070. 36. (*) F. Bec (1994). “The International Transmission of Real Business Cycles: Explaining the Cross-country Consumption Correlations.” Revue Economique 45, 89-114. 37. (*) F. Canova (1994). “Statistical Inference in Calibrated Models” Journal of Applied Econometrics 9, S123–S144. 38. (*) P. Feve and F. Langot (1994). “The RBC Models Through Statistical Inference: An Application With French Data” Journal of Applied Econometrics 9, S11–S35. 39. (*) B. F. Ingram, N. R. Kocherkolato, and N. R. Savin (1994). “Explaining Business Cycles: A Multiple-Shock Approach” Journal of Monetary Economics 34, 415–428. 40. (*) B. F. Ingram and C. H. Whiteman (1994). “Supplanting the ‘Minnesota’ Prior: Forecasting Macroeconomic Time Series Using Real Business Cycle Model Priors.” Journal of Monetary Economics 34, 497–510. 41. (*) E. R. McGrattan (1994). “The Effects of Distortionary Taxation.” Journal of Monetary Economics 33, 573–601. 42. (*) P. Soderlind (1994). “Cyclical Properties of a Real Business Cycle Model.” Journal of Applied Econometrics 9, S113–S122. 43. John P. Rust (1994). “Dynamic Structural Models: Problems and Prospects.” In Advances in Econometrics: Sixth World Congress, C. Sims, (ed.) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 3 44. Ray C. Fair (1994). Testing Macroeconometric Models. Cambridge, Mass and London, England: Harvard University Press. 45. Eric Leeper and Christopher Sims (1994). “Towards a Modern Macroeconomic Model Usable for Policy Analysis,” NBER Macroeconomics Annual. 46. (*) K. D. Hoover (1995). “Facts and Artifacts: Calibration and the Empirical Assessment of Real-business-cycle Models.” Oxford Economic Papers - New Series 47, 24–44. 47. (*) Danny Quah (1995). “Business-Cycle Empirics – Calibration and Estimation.” Economic Journal 105, 1594–1596. 48. (*) Michael R. Montgomery (1995). “ ‘Time-to-Build’ Completion Patterns for Nonresidential Structures, 1961–1991.” Economics Letters 48, 155-163. 49. (*) S. Oliner, G. Rudebusch, and D. Sichel (1995). “New and Old Models Business Investment – A Comparison of Forecasting Performance.” Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 27, 806–826. Also In Business Cycles, (1999), (eds.) Francis Diebold and Glenn Rudebusch, Princeton: Princeton University Press. 50. Michael Binder and H. Hashem Pesaran (1995). “Multivariate Rational Expectations Models and Macroeconomics Modeling: A Review and Some New Results.” In M. Hashem Pesaran and M. R. Wickens (eds), Handbook of Applied Econometrics: Macroeconomics, Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 51. K. Kim and A. Pagan (1995). “The Econometrics of Calibrated Models. ” In M. Hashem Pesaran and M.R. Wickens (eds), Handbook of Applied Econometrics: Macroeconomics, Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 52. Robert G. King (1995). “Quantitative Theory and Econometrics,” Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly 81(3) 53-105. 53. (*) M. Peeters (1996). “Investment Gestation Lags – The Difference Between Timeto-Build and Delivery Lags.” Applied Economics 28, 203–208. 54. (*) G. J. Hall (1996). “Overtime, Effort, and the Propagation of Business-Cycle Shocks.” Journal of Monetary Economics 38, 139–160. 55. (*) G. W. Smith (1996). “Method-of-Moments Measurement of UK Business Cycles.” Oxford Economic Papers - New Series 48, 568–583. 56. (*) C. Burnside and M. Eichenbaum (1996). “Small-Sample Properties of Gmm-Based Wald Tests.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics,” 14, 294–308. 57. Christian Zimmerman (1996). “A Real Business Cycle Bibliography,” CREFE Working Paper No. 43. 4 58. David Romer (1996). Advanced Macroeconomics. New York: McGraw Hill. 59. Y. Ohkusa (1996). “Monetary Shock Does Not Matter in Japan: A Kalman Filter Approach to Real Business Cycle Theory,” In Organization, Performance, Equity: Perspectives on the Japanese Economy, Sato Hovi (ed.), Kluwer Academic Publishers 60. (*) E.R. McGrattan, R. Rogerson, and R. Wright (1997). “An Equilibrium Model of the Business Cycle with Production Shocks and Fiscal Policy,” International Economic Review, 38, 267-290. 61. (*) J.E. Hartley, K. D. Hoover, and K.D. Salyer (1997). “The Limits of Business Cycle Research - Assessing the Real Business Cycle Model,” Oxford Review of Economic Policy 13, 34-54. 62. (*) G. D. Hess and K. Shin (1997). “International and Intranational Business Cycles,” Oxford Review of Economic Policy 13, 93-109. 63. (*) J.E. Hartley, K. D. Hoover, and K.D. Salyer (1997). “Calibration and Real Business-Cycle Models - An Unorthodox Experiment,” Journal of Macroeconomics 119, 1-17. 64. (*) Sumru Altug and Robert A. Miller (1998). “The Effect of Work Experience on Female Wages and Labor Supply.” Review of Economic Studies. 65. (*) Y. Wen (1998). “Can a Real Business Cycle Model Pass the Watson Test?” Journal of Monetary Economics 42, 185,203. 66. (*) Y. Wen (1998). “Investment Cycles.” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 22, 1139-1165. 67. (*) J. Kimmel and T.J. Kriesner (1998). “New Evidence on Labor Supply: Employment versus Hours Elasticities by Sex and Marital Status,” Journal of Monetary Economics 42, 289-301. 68. (*) M. Peeters (1998). “Persistence, Asymmetries, and Interrelation of Factor Demand,” Scandinavian Journal of Economics 100, 747-764. 69. S. Altug, F. Demers, and M. Demers (1999). “Cost Uncertainty, Taxation, and Irreversible Investment.” In Current Trends in Economics: Economic Theory and Applications,” Springer-Verlag series Studies in Economic Theory, Vol. 8, (eds.) A. Alkan, C.D. Aliprantis, and N.C. Yannelis. 70. (*) G.S. Lee (1999). “Housing Investment Dynamics, Period of Production, and Adjustment Costs,” Journal of Housing Economics 8, 1-25. 71. (*) G.S. Lee (1999). “Housing Cycles, and the Period of Production,” Applied Economics 31, 1219-1230. 5 72. (*) S. Altug, R. Ashley and D. Patterson (1999). “Are Technology Shocks Nonlinear?” Macroeconomic Dynamics 3, 506-533. 73. Pierre Dubois (2000). “Assurance complete, heterogeneit des preferences et metayage au Pakistan,” Annales d’Economie et de Statistique, ADRES, issue 59, pages 02, Juillet-S. 74. (*) Michaelides, A. and S. Ng (2000). “Estimating the Rational Expectations Model of Speculative Storage: A Monte Carlo Comparison of Three Simulation Estimators,” Journal of Econometrics 96, 231-266. 75. (*) D.N. DeLong, B.F. Ingram, and C.H. Whiteman (2000), “A Bayesian Approach to Dynamic Macroeconomics,” Journal of Econometrics, 98, 203-222. 76. (*) F. Schorfheide (2000). “Loss Function-based Evaluation of DSGE Models,” Journal of Applied Econometrics 15, 645-670. 77. (Syllabus) John Rust (2000). Department of Economics, Yale University, Stochastic Decision Processes: Theory, Computation, and Empirical Applications (2000) 78. Lars Ljundqvist and Thomas Sargent (2000). Recursive Macroeconomic Theory, MIT Press. 79. (*) Peter Ireland (2001). “Technology Shocks and the Business Cycle: An Empirical Investigation.” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 25(5), 703-719. 80. (*) T. Cogley (2001). “A Frequency Decomposition of Approximation Errors in Stochastic Discount Factor Models,” International Economic Review 42(2), 473-503. 81. Bennet McCallum (2002). “Recent Developments in Monetary Policy Analysis: The Roles of Theory and Evidence,” Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly 88/1 Winter 82. (*) Lawrence J. Christiano and Robert J. Vigfusson (2003). “Maximum Likelihood in the Frequency Domain: The Importance of Time-to-Plan,” Journal of Monetary Economics 50(4), 789-815. 83. (*) Marc del Negro and Frank Schorfheide (2003). “Priors from General Equilibrium Models for VARS,” International Economic Review 45(2), 643-673. ’item J. Adda and R. Cooper (2003). Dynamic economics: quantitative methods and applications, MIT Press 84. (*) Peter N. Ireland (2004). “A Method for Taking Models to the Data,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 28(6), 1205-1226. 85. Jing Liu, Channing Arndt, and Thomas W. Hertel (2004). “Parameter Estimation and Measures of Fit in A Global, General Equilibrium Model, ” Journal of Economic Integration 19(3), pp. 626 - 649. 6 86. Marco del Negro and Frank Schorfeide (2004). “Take Your Model Bowling: Forecasting with General Equilibrium Models,” Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Economic Review, Fourth Quarter 87. Nobel Prize 2004, “Finn Kydland and Edward Prescott’s Contribution to Dynamic Macroeconomics: The Time Consistency of Economic Policy and the Driving Forces Behind Business Cycles,” The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. 88. (*) Hafedh Bouakez (2005). “Nominal Rigidity, Desired Markup Variations, and Real Exchange Rate Persistence,” Journal of International Economics 66(1): 49-74. 89. (*) J.O. Hairault and F. Langot (2005). “Nobel Prize for Economy 2004,” Revue D’Economie Politique 115 (1): 65-83. 90. Matheus Albergaria de Magalhaes (2005). “Equilbrio e Ciclos (Equilibrium and Cycles),” Revista de Economia Contempornea 9(3) Rio de Janeiro, Sept./Dec. 91. Magalhaes, M. and P. Picchetti (2005). “Regress and Progress! An Econometric Characterization of the Short-Run Relationship between Productivity and Labor Input in Brazil,” Brazilian Review of Econometrics 25(2), 219265. 92. Kevin Hoover (2005). “Quantitative Evaluation of Idealized Models in the New Classical Macroeconomics,” In Idealization XII: Correcting the Model–Idealization and Abstraction in the Sciences (Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 86) Martin R. Jones and Nancy Cartwright (eds). 93. (*) Giannone D, Reichlin L, Sala L. (2006). “VARs, Common Factors and the Empirical Validation of Equilibrium Business Cycle Models,” Journal of Econometrics 132 (1): 257-279. 94. (*) Feve P. (2006). “Dynamic Macro-econometric Modelling,” Revue d’Economie Politique 116 (2): 147-197. 95. (*) Sims CA, Zha T. (2006). “Does Monetary Policy Generate Recessions?” Macroeconomic Dynamics 10 (2): 231-272. 96. (*) Mario Forni, Domenico Giannone, Marco Lippi, and Lucrezia Reichlin (2006). “Opening the Black Box: Structural Factor Models with Large Cross-Sections,” Econometric Theory 25, 1319-1347. 97. (Syllabus). George Hall, Department of Economics, Yale University (2006). Economics 526b: Advanced Macroeconomics. 98. (*) G. Kapetanios, A. Pagan, and A. Scott (2007). “Making A Match: Combining Theory and Evidence In Policy-Oriented Macroeconomic Modelling,” Journal of Econometrics 136 (2): 565-594. 7 99. (*) Francisco J. Ruge-Murcia (2007). “Methods to Estimate Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Models,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Volume 31(8), pp. 2599-2636. 100. (*) Sungbae An and Frank Schorfheide (2007). “Bayesian Analysis of DSGE Models,” Econometric Reviews, 26:2, 113 - 172. 101. (*) Alok Johri and Marc-Andre Letendre (2007). “What Do Residuals from FirstOrder Conditions Reveal about DGE Models?,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 31(8) pp. 2744-2773 102. (*) F. Zanetti (2008). “Labor and Investment Frictions in a Real Business Cycle Model,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 32(10), 3294-3314. 103. (*) Peter N. Ireland and Scott Schuh (2007). “Productivity and U.S. Macroeconomic Performance: Interpreting the Past and Predicting the Future with a Two-Sector Real Business Cycle Model,” Review of Economic Dynamics 11(3), 473-492. 104. Harding, Don and Negara, Siwage (2008). “Estimating baseline real business cycle models of the Australian economy,” MPRA paper 33556 105. F. Schorfhiede (2008). “DSGE Model-based Estimation of the New Keynesian Phillips Curve,” Federal Reserve of Richmond Economic Quarterly 94(4), 397-433. 106. Andrzej Kociecki (2008). “Do You Know How Many Structural Shocks You Have in Your Model? A Bayesian Framework for Testing Economic Models?” National Bank of Poland. 107. Michael Wickens (2008). Macroeconomics: A General Equilibrium Approach, Princeton University Press. 108. (*) Reichlin, L. (2008). “Discussion of ‘Taking DSGE models to the policy environment’ by Alvarez-Lois, Harrison, Piscitelli and Scott,” Conference on DSGE Modeling at Policy Making Institutions, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 32, 24532459 109. (*) Alessandra Del Boca, Marzio Galeotti and Charles Himmelberg (2008).“Investment and time to plan and build: A comparison of structures vs. equipment in a panel of Italian firms,” Journal of the European Economic Association 6, 864-889 110. (*) Robert A. Hart, James R. Malley, and Ulrich Woitek (2009). “Real Earnings and Business Cycles: New Evidence,” Empirical Economics 37(1), pp. 51-71. 111. (*) Pablo A. Acosta, Emmanuel K.K. Lartey, Federico S. Mandelman (2009). “Remittances and the Dutch disease,” Journal of International Economics, Volume 79, Issue 1, Pages 102116 112. Wing Leong Teo (2009). “Estimated Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Model of the Taiwanese Economy,” Pacific Economic Review, 14(2), pp. 194-231. 8 113. Jani Luoto (2009). “Bayesian Applications in Dynamic Econometric Models,” Jyvaskyla Studies in Business and Economics, 70. 114. (*) J. Malley and U. Woitek (2010). “Technology shocks and aggregate fluctuations in an estimated hybrid RBC model,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 34, 1214-1232. 115. (*) Yuriy Gorodnichenko and Serena Ng (2010). “Estimation of DSGE Models when the Data are Persistent,” Journal of Monetary Economics 57, 325-340. 116. (*) Mario Forni and Luca Gambetti (2010). “The Dynamic Effects of Monetary Policy: A Structural Factor Model Approach,” Journal of Monetary Economics 57, 203-216. 117. (*) Ozer Karagedikli, Troy Matheson, Christie Smith and Shaun P. Vahey (2010). “RBCs and DSGEs: The Computational Approach to Business Cycle Theory and Evidence,” Journal of Economic Surveys 24, 113-136. 118. (*) M. Ayhan Kose, Christopher Otrok and Eswar S. Prasad (2010). “Global Business Cycles: Convergence or Decoupling?” International Economic Review. 119. Shawn Leu and Jeffrey Sheen (2010). “The Australia-Asia Business Cycle Evolution,” in The Evolving Role of Asia in Global Finance edited by Yin-Wong Cheung, Vikas Kakkar, Guonan Ma, Emerald Publishers. 120. David Dejong and Chetan Dave (2011). Structural Macroeconometrics, Princeton University Press. 121. (*) John D. Tsoukalas (2011). “Time to build capital: Revisiting investment-cash-flow sensitivities,” Journal of Economics Dynamics and Control 35, 1000-1016. 122. (*) Mikael Juselius (2011). “Testing Steady-State Restrictions of Linear Rational Expectations Models when Data are Highly Persistent,” Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 73, 315-334. 123. (*) Marcel Wiedman (2011). “Money, Stock Prices and Central Banks: A Cointegrated VAR Analysis,” In Money, Stock Prices and Central Banks: A Cointegrated VAR Analysis, 1-451 124. Fernandez-de-Cordoba, G, and J. Torres (2011). “Forecasting the Spanish economy with an augmented VAR-DSGE model,” Journal of the Spanish Economic Association 2, 379-399 125. (*) Kose, M. Ayhan, Christopher Otrok, and Eswar Prasad (2012). “Global Business Cycles: Convergence or Decoupling?*.” International Economic Review 53.2: 511538. 126. Wickens, Michael. Macroeconomic theory: a dynamic general equilibrium approach. Princeton University Press, 2012. 9 127. (*) Qu, Zhongjun, and Denis Tkachenko (2012). “Identification and frequency domain quasi-maximum likelihood estimation of linearized dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models.” Quantitative Economics 3.1: 95-132. 128. Guerrn-Quintana, Pablo, and James M. Nason (2012). “Bayesian Estimation of DSGE Models.”. 129. Dai, Li (2012). “Does the DSGE model fit the Chinese economy? A Bayesian and Indirect Inference approach.” Diss. Cardiff University. 130. Haider, Adnan, Musleh-ud Din, and Ejaz Ghani (2012). “Monetary policy, informality and business cycle fluctuations in a developing economy vulnerable to external shocks.” 131. Chen, Liang (2012). “Identifying observed factors in approximate factor models: estimation and hypothesis testing,” NC State University PhD Thesis 132. Paccagnini, Alessia (2012). “Comparing Hybrid DSGE Models,” University of Milan - Bicocca Working Paper Series No. 228 133. Kuo, Chun-Hung (2012). “Three Essays on Macroeconometrics,” North Carolina State University PhD Thesis 134. J Lee (212). “Are structural parameters of DSGE models stable in Korea?” Journal of Asian Economics 135. Kaabia, Olfa, and Ilyes Abid (2013). “Theoretical Channels Of International Transmission During The Subprime Crisis To OECD Countries: A FAVAR Model Under Bayesian Framework.” Journal of Applied Business Research (JABR) 29.2: 443-460. 136. (*) Bekiros, Stelios, and Alessia Paccagnini (2013). “On the predictability of timevarying VAR and DSGE models.” Empirical Economics 45.1 (2013): 635-664. 137. Miao, Jianjun. “Economic Dynamics: Discrete Time.” 138. (*) Baurle, Gregor (2013). “Structural Dynamic Factor Analysis Using Prior Information From Macroeconomic Theory.” Journal of Business & Economic Statistics 31.2: 136-150. 139. (*) Brevik, Frode, and Stefano d’Addona (2013). “Is Ignorance Bliss? The Cost of Business-Cycle Uncertainty.” Macroeconomic Dynamics 17.04 : 728-746. 140. Millar, Jonathan N., Stephen D. Oliner, and Daniel E. Sichel (2013). “Time-to-Plan Lags for Commercial Construction Projects.” No. w19408. National Bureau of Economic Research . 141. (*) Canova, Fabio (2014). “Bridging DSGE models and the raw data.” Monetary Economics 67: 1-15. 10 Journal of 142. (*) Qu, Zhongjun (2014). “Inference in dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models with possible weak identification.” Quantitative Economics 5.2: 457-494. 143. (*) Sala, Luca (2014). “DSGE models in the frequency domain.” Journal of Applied Econometrics. 144. (*) Forni, Mario, Luca Gambetti, and Luca Sala (2014). “No news in business cycles.” The Economic Journal 124.581: 1168-1191. 145. (*) Bekiros, Stelios D., and Alessia Paccagnini (2014). “Bayesian forecasting with small and medium scale factor-augmented vector autoregressive DSGE models.” Computational Statistics & Data Analysis 71: 298-323. 146. Chahrour, Ryan, Sanjay K. Chugh, and Tristan Potter (2014). “Wages and Wedges in an Estimated Labor Search Model.” No. 867. Boston College Department of Economics. 147. (*) Ad, Ren (2014). “A Review of Optimal Investment Rules in Electricity Generation.” Quantitative Energy Finance. Springer New York, 3-40. 148. Young, Warren (2014). Real business cycle models in economics. Routledge. 149. (*) Kaabia, Olfa (2014). “Potential Contagion Effects on OECD Countries: A FAVAR Model under Bayesian Framework.” International Economic Journal ahead-of-print: 1-22. Working Papers 1. Beth Ingram and Eric M. Leeper (1990). “Post Econometric Policy Evaluation: A Critique,” International Finance Discussion Papers 393, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. 2. John S. Chipman (1992). “Empirical Methods in Computable-General Equilibrium Modelling.” University of Minnesota Working Paper. 3. Roger E. Farmer and Jang-Ting Guo (1994). “The Econometrics of Indeterminacy.” UCLA Working Paper. 4. Francis Diebold, Lee Ohanian, and Jeremy Berkowitz (1994). “Dynamic Equilibrium Economies: A Framework for Comparing Models and Data.” University of Pennsylvania Working Paper. 5. Lawrence J. Christiano and Sharon G. Harrison (1996). “Chaos, Sunspots, and Automatic Stabilizers,” NBER Working Papers 5703, National Bureau of Economic Research. 6. Alfred Greiner and Willi Semmler (1997). “Estimating an Endogenous Growth Model with Public Capital and Government Borrowing,” Bielefeld University. 11 7. Charles A. Fleischman (1999). “The Causes of Business Cycles and the Cyclicality of Real Wages,” Federal Reserve Board - Macroeconomic Analysis Section 8. Adrian Pagan (1999). “The Getting of Macroeconomic Wisdom,” Discussion Papers 412, Centre for Economic Policy Research, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University. 9. Petya Koeva (2000). “The Facts about Time-to-Build,” IMF Working paper 00/138. 10. Marco del Negro (2000). “Asymmetric Shocks Among U.S. States,” FRB of Atlanta WP 2000-27. 11. Alok Johri and Marc-Andre Letendre (2001). “Labour Market Dynamics in RBC Models,” McMaster University. 12. Hafedh Bouakez, Emanuela Cardia, and Francisco J. Ruge-Murcia (2002). “Habit Formation and the Persistence of Monetary Shocks,” Working Papers 02-27, Bank of Canada. 13. Douglas Swaine (2002). “Are Taste and Technology Parameters Stable? A Test of ‘Deep’ Parameter Stability in Real Business Cycle Models of the US Economy,” Federal Reserve Bank of Boston WP No. 01-5. 14. Canova, Fabio (2002). “Validating Monetary DSGE Models through VARs,” CEPR Discussion Papers 3442. 15. Jenn-Hong Tang (2003). “Macroeconomic Shocks and U.S. Gross Job Flows in the Business Cycle: A Maximum-Likelihood Approach,” Institute of Economics, Academia Sinica 16. Salvatore Nistico (2003). “Monetary Policy and Stock Prices in a DSGE Framework,” University of Rome Tor Vergata. 17. Peter Raagauge (2003). “Empirical Rationality in the Stock Market,” Copenhagen Business School. 18. Jose Carillo and Patrick Feve (2004). “Some Perils of Policy Rule Regression,” GREMAQ, University of Toulouse. 19. Jesus Fernandez-Villaverde and Juan F. Rubio-Ramirez (2004). “Estimating Nonlinear Dynamic Equilibrium Economies: A Likelihood Approach,” University of Pennsylvania, PIER Working Paper 04-001. 20. Robert Tamura (2004). “Human Capital and Economic Development,” Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta WP 2004-34. 21. W. A. Greiner, and W. Zhang (2004). “Monetary and Fiscal Policies in the Euro Area: Macro Modelling, Learning, and Empirics,” Center for Empirical Macroeconomics, University of Bielefeld. 12 22. Thomas King (2005). “Structural Change, Productivity and Labor Market Dynamics,” Dissertation, Washington University. 23. Thomas King (2005). “Dynamic Equilibrium Models with Time-Varying Structural Parameters,” Washington University. 24. Yuriy Gorodnichenko (2005). “Reduced-Rank Identification of Structural Shocks in VARs,” University of California, Berkeley. 25. H. Liboshi, S. Nishiyama, and T. Watanabe (2005). “An Estimated Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Model of the Japanese Economy: A Bayesian Analysis,” Bank of Japan. 26. Jean Boivin and Marc Giannoni (2006). “DSGE Models in a Data-Rich Environment,” NBER Technical Working Papers 0332, National Bureau of Economic Research. 27. Louis Phaneuf and Nooman Rebei (2006). “An Estimated Business Cycle Model with Stage-specific Technological Change,”Universite de Quebec. 28. David Liedo (2006). “Priors from Real Business Cycle Models in Dynamic Factor Models,” ECARES, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. 29. David Liedo (2006). “RBC Models at Forecasting: Exploring the Reasons behind Their Success,” ECARES, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. 30. Martin Fukac and Adrian Pagan (2006). “Issues in Adopting DSGE Models for Use in the Policy Process,” Czech National Bank Working Paper Series 6. 31. Fabrice Collard, Patrick Feve, and Julien Matheron (2006). “Short-Run Restrictions: An Identification Device?” University of Toulouse. 32. Yong-Gook Jung (2006). “Investment Lags and Macroeconomic Dynamics,” University of California, San Diego. 33. Louis Phaneuf and Nooman Rebei (2007). “Technology Shocks and Business Cycles: The Role of Processing Stages and Nominal Rigidities,”Working Papers 07-7, Bank of Canada. 34. John Foster (2007). “A Micro-meso-macro Perspective on the Methodology of Evolutionary Economics: Integrating History, Simulation and Econometrics,” Discussion Papers Series 343, School of Economics, University of Queensland, Australia. 35. P. Minford, K. Theodoridis, and D. Meenagh (2007). “A Bootstrap Test for the Dynamic Performance of DSGE Models - An Outline and Some Experiments,” Cardiff Economics Working Papers E2007/2, Cardiff University, Cardiff Business School, Economics Section. 13 36. J. Rios Rull, F. Schorfheide, C. Fuentes-Albero, R. Santaeulalia-Llopis and M. Kryshko (2007). “Methods versus Substance: Measuring the Effects of Technology Shocks on Hours,” University of Minnesota and University of Pennsylvania. 37. Pablo A. Acosta, Emmanuel K.K. Lartey and Federico S. Mandelman (2007). “Remittances and the Dutch Disease,” Working Paper 2007-08, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. 38. David de-Antonio-Liedo (2007). “How Many Shocks?” ECARES, Universite Libre de Bruxelles (U.L.B.). 39. L. Zheng (2007). “Time-varying Labor Income Share in Real Business Cycle Models,” Carnegie-Mellon Unversity. 40. Don Harding and Siwage Negara (2007). “Exploring the Role of Permanent and Transitory Shocks in Explaining the Business Cycle,” University of Melbourne. 41. Pytlarczyk, Ernest (2007). “Construction and Bayesian Estimation of DSGE Models for the Euro Area,” Ph.D Thesis, Universitt Hamburg 42. Luca Fanelli (2008). “Estimation of a DSGE model under VAR expectations,” University of Bologna 43. Louis Phaneuf and Nooman Rebei (2008). “Production Stages and the Transmission of Technological Progress,” CIRPEE Working Paper 08-02. 44. Marco Del Negro and Christopher Otrok (2008). “Dynamic Factor Models with TimeVarying Parameters: Measuring Changes in International Business Cycles,” FRB of New York Staff Report No. 326. 45. Luoto, Jani (2009). “Bayesian applications in dynamic econometric models,” University of Jyvaskyl 46. Koiti Yano (2009). “Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Models In a Liquidity Trap and Self-organizing State Space Modeling,” Economic and Social Research Institute, Cabinet Office, Government of Japan. 47. Frode Brevik and Stefano d’Addona (2009). “Is Ignorance Bliss? Business-Cycle Uncertainty, ” University of St. Gallen. The Cost of 48. Jiho Lee (2009). “Are Structural Parameters of DSGE Models Stable in Korea?” Institute for Monetary and Economic Research, The Bank of Korea. 49. Martin Fukac and Adrian Pagan (2009). “Structural Macro-Econometric Modelling in a Policy Environment,” Reserve Bank of New Zealand Discussion Paper Series DP2009/16, Reserve Bank of New Zealand. 14 50. Cristina Fuentes-Albero, Maxym Kryshko, Jose-Victor Rios-Rull, Raul SantaeulaliaLlopis, and Frank Schorfheide (2009). “Methods Versus Substance: Measuring the Effects of Technology Shocks on Hours,” CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP7474 51. Mario Forni and Luca Gambetti (2010). “Fiscal Foresight and the Effects of Government Spending,” CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP7840 52. Shawn Chen-Yu Leu and Jeffrey Sheen (2010). “The Australia-Asia Business Cycle Evolution,” manuscript. 53. Maxym Kryshko (2010). “Data-Rich DSGE and Dynamic Factor Models,” University of Pennsylvania. 54. A. Haider and D. Ramzi (2010). “Sticky Information vs Sticky Prices: An Empirical comparison within a DSGE,” MPRA Paper. 55. Koiti Yano, Yasuyuki Iida and Hajime Wago (2010). “Estimating New Keynesian DSGE Models in A Liquidity Trap Using the Monte Carlo Particle Filter: An Application to the Japanese Economy,” Econometric Society World Congress, 2010 56. Alessia Paccagnini (2011). “DSGE Model Evaluation and Hybrid Models: A Comparison,” EUI Working Paper MWP 2011/11 57. Maxym Kryshko (2011). “Data-Rich DSGE and Dynamic Factor Models,” IMF Working Paper No. 11/216 58. Chen, Liang (2012). “Identifying observed factors in high dimensional factor models.” Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Working paper. 59. Haider, Adnan and Din, Musleh-ud and Ghani, Ejaz (2012). “Monetary policy, informality and business cycle fluctuations in a developing economy vulnerable to external shocks,” MPRA paper 42484 60. Hirata, Hideaki, M. Ayhan Kose, and Christopher Otrok (2013). “Regionalization vs. globalization.” Globalization (February 2013). CAMA Working Paper 9. 61. Albonico, Alice, Alessia Paccagnini, and Patrizio Tirelli (2014). “Estimating a DSGE model with Limited Asset Market Participation for the Euro Area.” University of Milan Bicocca Department of Economics, Management and Statistics Working Paper 286. 62. Ryan Chahrour, Sanjay K. Chugh, and Tristan Potter (2014). “Searching for Prices: An Empirical Investigation,” Boston College, manuscript 63. Mauro Bambi, Cristina Di Girolami, Salvatore Federico, and Fausto Gozzi (2014). “On the Consequences of Generically Distributed Investments on Flexible Projects in an Endogenous Growth Model,” University of York, manuscript 15 “Household Choices in Equilibrium,” with R. Miller, Econometrica 58, (1990), 543–570. 1. (*) Michael Keane and David Runkle (1990). “Testing the Rationality of Price Forecasts: New Evidence From Panel Data.” American Economic Review 80, 714–735. 2. Robert A. Miller (1990). “Labor Supply with a Minimum Hours Threshold: A Comment.” Carnegie–Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 33, 169–180. 3. (*) Hiroshi Osano and Tohru Inoue (1991). “Testing Between Models of Real Business Cycles.” International Economic Review 32, 669–688. 4. (*) John Cochrane (1991). “A Simple Test of Consumption Insurance.” Journal of Political Economy 99, 957–976. 5. (*) Ben Craig and Raymond G. Batina (1991). “The Effects of Social Security in a Life Cycle Family Labor Supply Simulation Model.” Journal of Public Economics 46, 199–226. 6. (*) F. Laisney, M. Lechner, A. Vanhoest and G. Wagenhals (1993). “A Life Cycle Labour Supply Model with Taxes Estimated on German Panel Data: The Case of Parallel Preferences.” Economic and Social Review 24, 335–68. 7. (*) Mark Rosenzweig and Kenneth Wolpin (1993). “Credit Market Constraints, Consumption Smoothing, and the Accumulation of Durable Production Assets in LowIncome Countries: Investments in Bullocks in India.” Journal of Political Economy 101, 223–244. Also In Readings in Development Microeconomics: Emprical Microeconomics, (2000), Pranab K. Bardhan and Christopher Udry (eds.), Cambridge, MA.: MIT Press. 8. (*) Richard Blundell, Costas Meghir, and Pedro Neves (1993). “Labour Supply and Intertemporal Substitution.” Journal of Econometrics 59, 137–160. 9. (*) Angus Deaton and Christina Paxson (1994). “Intertemporal Choice and Inequality.” Journal of Political Economy 102, 437–467. 10. (*) Robert M. Townsend (1994).“Risk and Insurance in Village India.” Econometrica 62, 539–591. 11. (*) C. Phelan (1994). “Incentives, Insurance, and the Variability of Consumption and Leisure.” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 18, 581–599. 12. (*) C. Udry (1994). “Risk and Insurance in a Rural Credit Market: An Empirical Investigation in Northern Nigeria.” Review of Economic Studies 61, 495–526. 13. (*) E. Ventura (1994). “A Note on Measurement Error and Euler Equations: An Alternative to Log-linear Approximations.” Economics Letters 45, 305–308. 16 14. (*) Victor Rios-Rull (1994). “On the Quantitative Importance of Market Incompleteness.” Journal of Monetary Economics 34, 463–496. 15. David Card (1994). ‘Individual Labor Supply and Aggregate Fluctuations.” In Advances in Econometrics: Sixth World Congress, C. Sims, (ed.) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 16. O. Attanasio and S. Davis (1994). “Relative Wage Movements and the Distribution of Consumption,” NBER Working Paper 4771. 17. L. Kotlikoff (1994). “A Critical Review of Social Insurance Analysis by Multilateral Lending Institutions,” Revista de Analisis Economico. 18. Richard Blundell (1994). “Evaluating Microeconometric Models of Labour Supply,” Proceedings of the Sixth World Congress of the Econometric Society, C. Sims (ed.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 19. (*) Robert M. Townsend (1995). “Consumption Insurance - An Evaluation of RiskBearing Systems in Low-Income Economies.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 9, 83–102. 20. (*) Robert Townsend (1995). “Financial Systems In Northern Thai Villages.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 110, 1011–1046. 21. (*) Narayan Y. Naik and Michael J. Moore (1996). “Habit Formation and Intertemporal Substitution in Individual Food Consumption.” Review of Economics and Statistics 78, 321–328. 22. (*) Vassilis Hajivassiliou and Yannis Ioannides (1996). “Duality and Liquidity Constraints Under Uncertainty.” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 20, 1177– 1192.. 23. (*) Fumio Hayashi, Joseph Altonji and Lawrence Kotlikoff (1996). “Risk-Sharing Between and Within Families.” Econometrica 64, 261–294. 24. (*) Annamaria Lusardi (1996). “Permanent Income, Current Income and Consumption: Evidence from 2 Panel Data Sets.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 14 81–90. 25. (*) W. Vanderklaauw (1996). “Female Labor Supply and Marital Status Decisions – A Life-Cycle Model.” Review of Economic Studies 63, 199–235. 26. Philip Bond and Robert Townsend (1996) “Formal and Informal Financing in a Chicago Ethnic Neighborhood,” Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Economic Perspectives 3-27. 27. Christian Zimmerman (1996). “A Real Business Cycle Bibliography,” CREFE Working Paper No. 43. 17 28. Ariel Pakes (1996). “Dynamic Structural Models, Problems and Prospects: Mixed Discrete Continuous Controls and Market Interactions,” Proceedings of the Sixth World Congress of the Econometric Society, C. Sims (ed.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 29. (*) M. Browning and A. Lusardi (1997). “Household Saving - Micro Theories and Micro Facts.” Journal of Economic Literature 34, 1797–1855. 30. Robert A. Miller (1997). “Estimating Models of Dynamic Optimization With Microeconomic Data.” In H. Pesaran and P. Schmidt (eds) Handbook of Applied Econometrics: Microeconomics, Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 31. (*) Robert A. Miller and H. Seig (1997). “Accounting for Differences in Preferences and Technologies Across Countries Through Their Impact on Household Behavior.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 15, 237–253. 32. (*) R. Garcia, A. Lusardi, and S. Ng (1997). “Excess Sensitivity and Asymmetries in Consumption - An Empirical investigation.” Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 29, 154–176. 33. (*) R. Alessie, M.P. Devereux, and G. Weber (1997). “Intertemporal Consumption, Durables, and Liquidity Constraints - A Cohort Analysis.” European Economic Review 41, 37–59. 34. (*) S. Dynarski, J. Gruber, Robert A. Moffitt, and Gary Burtless (1997). “Can Families Smooth Variable Earnings?” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1, 229303. 35. (*) R. Alessie and A. Lusardi (1997). “Saving and Income Smoothing - Evidence from Panel Data,” European Economic Review 41, 1251-1279. 36. (*) G. Jacoby and E. Skoufias (1997). “Risk, Financial Markets, and Human Capital in a Developing Country,” Review of Economic Studies 64, 311-335. 37. (*) Sumru Altug and Robert A. Miller (1998). “The Effect of Work Experience on Female Wages and Labor Supply.” Review of Economic Studies 65, 45-85. 38. (*) A.E. Scorcu (1998). “Consumption Risk-Sharing in Italy,” Applied Economics 30, 407-414. 39. (*) J.P. Ziliak (1998). “Does the Choice of Consumption Measure Matter – An Application of the Permanent Income Hypothesis,“ Journal of Monetary Economics 41, 201-216. 40. (*) Bent Sorensen and Oved Yosha (1998). “International Risk Sharing and European Monetary Unification.” Journal of International Economics 45, 211-238. 18 41. (*) H. G. Jacoby and E. Skoufias (1998). “Testing Theories of Consumption Behavior Using Information on Aggregate Shocks, Income Seasonality, and Rainfall in Rural India, ” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 80, 1-14. 42. (*) M.D. Collado (1998). “Separability and Aggregate Shocks in the Life-Cycle Model of Consumption - Evidence from Spain,” Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 60(2), 227247. 43. (*) Lim, Y. and Townsend R.M. (1998). “General Equilibrium Models of Financial Systems: Theory and Measurement in Village Economies,” Review of Economic Dynamics, 1(1), pp. 59-118. 44. (*) F. Ohtake and M. Saito (1998), “Population Aging and Consumption Inequality in Japan,” Review of Income and Wealth 361-381. 45. (*) Kostas G. Mavromaras and Helmut Rudolph (1998). “Temporary Separations and Firm Size in the German Labour Market,” Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 60(2), 215 - 225. 46. (*) Lubos Pastor and Robert F. Stambaugh (1999). “Costs of Equity Capital and Model Mispricing,” Journal of Finance 54 (1), 67121. 47. (*) O.P. Attanasio, J. Banks, C. Meghir (1999). “Humps and Bumps in Lifetime Consumption,” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 17, 22-35. 48. (*) J.P. DeJuan and J.J. Seater (1999). “The Permanent Income Hypothesis: Evidence from the Consumer Expenditure Survey,” Journal of Monetary Economics 43, 351-376. 49. Richard Blundell and Thomas MaCurdy (1999). ”Labor Supply: A Review of Alternative Approaches,” Handbook of Labor Economics, Vol. 8, Chapter 27, (eds.) O. Ashenfelter and D. Card, Elsevier. 50. M. Browning, L.P. Hansen, and J.J. Heckman (1999), “Micro Data and General Equilibrium Models,” in Handbook of Macroeconomics, (eds), John Taylor and Michael Woodford, North Holland. 51. R. Townsend (1999). “Removing Financial Bottlenecks to Labor Productivity in Thailand,” In The Asian Financial Crisis: Origins, Implications, and Solutions, W. Hunter, G. Kaufman, and T. Krueger (eds.) Kluwer Academic Publishers. 52. Adriana Arreaza, Bent Sorensen and Oved Yosha (1999). “Consumption Smoothing through Fiscal Policy in OECD and EU Countries,” In Fiscal Institutions and Fiscal Performance, James Poterba and Jurgen Van hagen (eds.), National Bureau of Economic Research. 53. Tomaso Duso (1999). “Complete Markets in Italy: An Analysis on Micro Data,” Giornale degli Economisti e Annali di Economia 58(1), 1-25. 19 54. (*) M. Margiotta and Robert A. Miller (2000), “Managerial Compensation and the Cost of Moral Hazard,” International Economic Review 41, 669-719. 55. (*) G. Hess and K. Shin (2000). “Risk Sharing by Households Within and Across Regions and Industries,” Journal of Monetary Economics 45, 533-560. 56. (*) S.H. Lence (2000). “Using Consumption and Asset Return Data to Estimate Farmers’ Time Preference and Risk Attitudes,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 82, 934-940. 57. (*) H. Sieg (2000). “Estimating a Dynamic Model of Household Choices in the Presence of Income Taxation,” International Economic Review 41, 637-668. 58. (*) J.C. Ham and K. Jacobs (2000). “Testing for Full Insurance using Exogenous Information,” Journal of Business Economics and Statistics 18, 387-397. 59. Kris Jacobs (2000). “Estimating Nonseparable Preference Specifications for Asset Market Participants, Econometric Society World Congress 2000 Contributed Papers. 60. J. Tin (2000). “Life-cycle Hypothesis, Propensities to Save, and Demand for Financial Assets,” Journal of Economics and Finance 24(2), 110-121. 61. (*) M. Ogaki and Q. Zhang (2001). “Decreasing Relative Risk Aversion and Tests of Risk Sharing,” Econometrica 69, 515-526. 62. (*) S.C. Ahn, Y.H. Lee, and P. Schmidt (2001). “GMM Estimation of Linear Panel Data Models with Time-Varying Individual Effects,” Journal of Econometrics 101, 219-255. 63. (*) K. Storesletten, C.I. Telmer, and A.Yaron (2001). “How Important are Idiosyncratic Shocks? Evidence from Labor Supply,” American Economic Review 91, 413-417. 64. (*) J.J. Heckman (2001). “Micro Data, Heterogeneity, and the Evaluation of Public Policy: Nobel Lecture,” Journal of Political Economy 109, 673-748. 65. (*) P. Maitra (2001). “Is Consumption Smooth at the Cost of Volatile Leisure? An Investigation of Rural India,” Applied Economics 33(6), 727-734. 66. M. Saito (2001). “An Empirical Investigation of Intergenerational Consumption Distribution: A Comparison Among Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom,” Aging Issues in the United States and Japan, Seiritsu Ogura, Toshiaki Tachibanaki, and David A. Wise (eds.), Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 67. (*) Edward S. Prescott and Robert M. Townsend (2002). “Collective Organizations versus Relative Performance Contracts: Inequality, Risk Sharing, and Moral Hazard,” Journal of Economic Theory 103 (2), 282-310. 68. (*) T.J. Kniesner and J.P. Ziliak (2002). “Tax Reform and Automatic Stabilizers,” American Economic Review 92(3), 590-612. 20 69. (*) Schankerman M. (2002). “Idiosyncratic and Common Shocks to Investment Decisions,” Economic Journal 112 (482), 766-785. 70. (*) Enrique Sentana (2002). “Did the EMS Reduce the Cost of Capital?” Economic Journal 112 (482), 786809. 71. (*) Cogley T. (2002). “Idiosyncratic Risk and the Equity Premium: Evidence from the Consumer Expenditure Survey,” Journal of Monetary Economics 49 (2): 309-334. 72. (*) Sebnem Kalemli-Ozcan, Bengt E. Sorensen, and Oved Yosha (2002), ”Risk Sharing and Industrial Specialization: Regional and International Evidence,” American Economic Review 93 (3), 903-918. 73. P. Dubois (2002). “Consommation, Partage de Risque et Assurrance Informelle: Developpements Theoriques et Tests Empiriques Recents,” L’actualite Economiques 78, 115-149. 74. (Syllabus) Fatih Guvenen (2002), Department of Economics, University of Rochester, ECON 529, Dynamic Asset Pricing and Consumption. 75. (*) Skoufias E. (2003). “Consumption Smoothing in Russia - Evidence from the RLMS,” Economics of Transition 11 (1): 67-91. 76. (*) Houser D. (2003). “Bayesian Analysis of a Dynamic Stochastic Model of Labor Supply and Saving,” Journal of Econometrics 113 (2): 289-335. 77. Bent E. Sorensen and Oved Yosha (2003). “Financial Market Integration in the Middle East: How Big is the Peace Dividend?” Israel Economic Review 2, 1-19. 78. David Roland-Holst and Finn Tarp (2003). “New Perspectives on Aid Effectiveness, ” In Toward Pro Poor Policies: Aid, Institutions, and Globalization, Bertil Tungodden, Nicholas Stern, and Ivar Kolstad (eds), World Bank and Oxford University Press. 79. (*) Martin Browning, Thomas F. Crossley, and Guglielmo Weber (2004). “Asking Consumption Decisions in General Purpose Surveys,” Economic Journal 113, F540567, Special Issue F. 80. (*) Orazio Attanasio and Hamish Low (2004). “Estimating Euler Equations,” Review of Economic Dynamics 7, 406-435. 81. (*) Dirk Krueger and Fabrizio Perri (2004). “On the Welfare Consequences of the Increase in Inequality in the US,” NBER Macroeconomics Annual. 82. (*) K. Storesletten, C. I. Telmer, and A. Yaron (2004). “Consumption and Risk Sharing over the Life Cycle,” Journal of Monetary Economics 5193), 609-633. 83. (*) E. Skoufias (2004). “Consumption Smoothing during the Economic Transition in Bulgaria,” Journal of Comparative Economics , 328-347. 21 84. (*) Qiang Zhang and Masao Ogaki (2004). “Decreasing Relative Risk Aversion, Risk Sharing and the Permanent Income Hypothesis,” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, 22. 85. (*) K. Jacobs and K. Wang (2004). “Idiosyncratic Consumption Risk and the Cross Section of Asset Returns,” Journal of Finance, 51, 2211-2252. 86. Soyoung Kim, Sunghyun H. Kim, and Yunjong Wang (2004). “Regional Versus Global Risk Sharing in East Asia,” Asian Economic Papers 3(3), 182-201. 87. (Syllabus) Dirk Krueger (2004). “Economics 712: Consumption and Saving, University of Pennsylavania. 88. (*) Arpad Abraham and Nicola Pavoni (2005). “The Efficient Allocation of Consumption under Moral Hazard and Hidden Access to the Credit Market,” Journal of the European Economic Association, 3, 370-381. 89. (*) Gardes F., Duncan G. J., Gaubert P., et al. (2005). “Panel and Pseudo-panel Estimation of Cross-sectional and Time Series Elasticities of Food Consumption: The Case of US and Polish Data,” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 23 (2): 242-253. 90. Richard Blundell, Thomas MaCurdy and Costas Meghir (2007). “Labor Supply Models: Unobserved Heterogeneity, Nonparticipation and Dynamics,” In Handbook of Econometrics Volume 6A. James J. Heckman and Edward E. Leamer (eds.), Amsterdam: Elsevier 91. (*) Fatih Guvenen (2007). “Do Stockholders Share Risk More Effectively than Nonstockholders?” Review of Economics and Statistics 89, 275–288. 92. (*) Kjetil Storesletten, Christopher I. Telmer, and Amir Yaron (2007). “Asset Pricing with Idiosyncratic Risk and Overlapping Generations,” Review of Economic Dynamics 10, pp. 519-548. 93. Kjetil Storesletten, Christopher I. Telmer, and Amir Yaron (2007). “Asset Prices and Intergenerational Risk Sharing: The Role of Idiosyncratic Earnings Shocks,” Handbook of the Equity Risk Premium: Handbooks in Finance, Rajnish Mehra (ed.), Amsterdam: Elsevier. 94. (*) A. Ahn, Y. Lee, and P. Schmidt (2007). “Panel Data Models with Multiple Timevarying Individual Effects,” Journal of Productivity Analysis. 95. S. Bond and J. Van Reneen (2007). “Microeconometric Models of Investment and Employment,” In Handbook of Econometrics Volume 6A, (eds.) James J. Heckman and Edward E. Leamer, Amsterdam: Elsevier. 96. (*) Maurer J. and Meier A. (2008). “Smooth it like the ’Joneses’ ? Estimating PeerGroup Effects in Intertemporal Consumption Choice,” Economic Journal 118, 454476. 22 97. (*) Sung Jin Kang and Yasuyuki Sawada (2008). “Credit Crunch and Household Welfare: The Case of the Korean Financial Crisis,” Japanese Economic Review 69(4), 438-458. 98. (*) Samuel Bentolila and Andrea Ichino (2008). “Unemployment and Consumption Near and Far Away from the Mediterranean,” Journal of Population Economics 21, 255-280. 99. S. Kim, J.W. Lee, K. Shin (2008). “Regional and Global Financial Integration in East Asia,” In China, Asia, and the New World Economy, Barry Eichengreen, Yong-chol Pak, Yung Chul Park, and Charles Wyplosz (eds.), Oxford: Oxford University Press. 100. Bertrand Koebel, Francois Laisney, Winfried Pohlmeier and Matthias Staat (2008). “Life Cycle Labor Supply and Panel Data: A Survey,” In Advanced Studies in Theoretical and Applied Econometrics: The Econometrics of Panel Data Fundamentals and Recent Developments in Theory and Practice, Laszlo Matyas and Patrick Sevestre (eds.), Berlin: Springer-Verlag. 101. (*) Asdrubali, Pierfederico and Soyoung Kim (2008). “Incomplete Intertemporal Consumption Smoothing and Incomplete Risk Sharing,” Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 40(7), 1521-31. 102. Sung Jin Kang and Yasuyuki Kawada (2008). “Credit Crunch and Household Welfare, the Case of the Korean Financial Crisis,” Japanese Economic Review 59(4), 438-458. 103. (*) Narayana R. Kocherlakota and Luigi Pistaferri (2009). “Asset Pricing Implications of Pareto Optimality with Private Information,” Journal of Political Economy 117(3). 104. (*) Michael Hurd and Susann Rohwedder (2009). “Methodological Innovations in Collecting Spending Data: The HRS Consumption and Activities Mail Survey,” Fiscal Studies 30, 435-459. 105. (*) J. S. Bai (2009). “Panel Data Models with Interactive Fixed Effects,” Econometrica 77, 1229-1279. 106. (*) Orazio Attanasio and Guglielmo Weber (2010). “Consumption and Saving: Models of Intertemporal Allocation and Their Implications for Public Policy,” Journal of Economic Literature 48, 693-751. 107. (*) Drew Saunders (2010). “Sharing Risk Efficiently under Suboptimal Punishments for Defection,” The B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economic, Topics Volume 10, Issue 1, Article 17 108. (*) Michael Keane (2010). “Structural versus Atheoretic Approaches to Econometrics,” Journal of Econometrics 156, 3-20. 109. Michael Keane (2010). “The TaxTransfer System and Labour Supply,” In Australias Future Tax and Transfer Policy Conference: Proceedings of a Conference, Melbourne Institute. 23 110. (*) Asdrubali, Pierfederico and Kim, Soyoung (2011). “The evolution of regional and global risk-sharing in East Asian economies,” In Dynamics of Asian Financial Integration: Facts and Analytics Devereux, M.B.; Lane, P.R.; Park, C.Y.; et al. (eds), Routledge Studies in the Modern World Economy, Volume 87, 77-92 111. (*) Mazzocco, Maurizio (2012). “Testing efficient risk sharing with heterogeneous risk preferences.” The American Economic Review 102.1: 428-468. 112. (*) Bonhomme, S., et al. (2012). “Sharing wage risk.” manuscript, Massachusetts Institute of Technology . 113. (*) Miller, Robert A. (2012). “Life % Cycle Fertility and Human Capital Accumulation.” 114. Gayle, Wayne-Roy, and Natalia Khorunzhina (2012). “Estimation of optimal consumption choice with habit formation and measurement errors using micro data.” 115. Naaman, Michael (2012). “On the Microdynamics of Labor Supply with Home Production.” 116. Khorunzhina, Natalia (2012). “Dynamic Stock Market Participation of Households with Heterogeneous Participation Costs.” The 39th European Finance Association Annual Meeting (EFA 2012). 117. (*) Ahn, Seung C., Young H. Lee, and Peter Schmidt (2013). “Panel data models with multiple time-varying individual effects.” Journal of Econometrics 174.1: 1-14. 118. (*) Blundell, Richard, Hamish Low, and Ian Preston (2013). “Decomposing changes in income risk using consumption data.” Quantitative Economics 4.1: 1-37. 119. (*) Li, Sanxi, Hailin Sun, and Pu Chen (2013). “Assortative matching of risk-averse agents with endogenous risk.” Journal of Economics 109.1: 27-40. 120. Alvarez-Cuadradoa, Francisco, Jose Maria Casadob, and Jose Maria Labeagac (2013). “Envy and Habits.” 121. Naaman, Michael (2013). “On the Microdynamics of Labor Supply with Home Production.” 122. Larin, Alexander, Anna Novak, and Irina Khvostova (2013). “Households Consumption Behavior in Russia: Estimates on Micro Data,”National Research University Higher School of Economics 123. (*) Badel, Alejandro, and Mark Huggett (2014). “Interpreting life-cycle inequality patterns as an efficient allocation: Mission impossible?.” Review of Economic Dynamics 17.4: 613-629. 124. (*) Guvenen, Fatih, and Anthony A. Smith (2014). “Inferring labor income risk and partial insurance from economic choices.” Econometrica 82.6: 2085-2129. 24 125. (*) Lacz, Sarolta (2014). “Risk Sharing with Limited Commitment and Preference Heterogeneity: Structural Estimation and Testing.” Journal of the European Economic Association. Working Papers 1. Charles Cicchetti and Jeffrey Dubin (1992). “A Micro-econometric Model of Risk Aversion and the Decision to Self-Insure,” California Institute of Technology Social Science Working Paper 784. 2. Jean Kimmel (1993). “The Intertemporal-Substitution Hypothesis is Alive and Well (But Hiding in the Data),” Staff Working Papers 93-19, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research. Working Paper, Economics, Statistic and Econometrics, 199554-28-20. 3. Ethan Ligon (1996). “Risk-Sharing and Information: Theory and Measurement in Village Economies,” Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, UC Berkeley, Working Paper Series 824. 4. Sorensen, Bent E and Yosha, Oved (1999). “Risk Sharing and Industrial Specialization: Regional and International Evidence,” CEPR Discussion Papers 2295. 5. Mario J. Crucini and Gregory D. Hess (1999). “International and Intranational Risk Sharing,” CESifo Working Paper Series CESifo Working Paper No., CESifo. 6. Ricardo Cossa, James J. Heckman, and Lance Lochner (1999). “Wage Subsidies and Skill Formation: A Study of the Earned Income Tax Credit,” Dept. of Economics, University of Chicago. 7. Mark Coppejans and Holger Sieg (2000). “Average Difference Estimation of Nonlinear Pricing Models,” Duke University. 8. James J. Heckman, Lance Lochner, and Ricardo Cossa (2002). “Learning-by-Doing Vs. On-the-Job Training: Using Variation Induced by the EITC to Distinguish between Models of Skill Formation,” University of Chicago. 9. Kris Jacobs (2002). “The Rate of Risk Aversion May be Lower than You Think,” CIRANO Working Papers 2002s-08. 10. Richard Blundell, Luigi Pastaferri, and Ian Preston (2002). “Partial Insurance, Information, and Consumption Dynamics,” IFS Working Papers W02/16, Institute for Fiscal Studies. 11. Emmanuel Skoufias and Susan W. Parker (2002). “Labor Market Shocks and Their Impact on Work and Schooling: Evidence from Urban Mexico,” Food Consumption and Nutrition Division Discussion Paper 129, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, D.C. 25 12. George Levi-Gayle and Robert A. Miller (2002). “Life-Cycle Fertility and Human Capital Accumulation,” Working Paper. 13. S. Kang and Y. Sawada (2002). “Household Coping Strategies and the Financial Crisis in Korea,” University of Tokyo. 14. Wei Pierre Wang (2002). “Asset Pricing and the Equity Premium Puzzle: A Review Essay,” Queens School of Business. 15. Eric R. Young (2003). “Annuity Markets and Aggregate Dynamics (2003).” Working Paper, Florida State University. 16. Tavneet Suri (2003). “Spillovers in Village Consumption: Testing the Extent of Partial Insurance,” Working Paper, Yale University. 17. Sebnem Kalemli-Ozcan, Bent E. Sorensen, and Oved Yosha (2004). “Asymmetric Shocks and Risk Sharing in a Monetary Union: Updated Evidence and Policy Implications for Europe,” CEPR Discussion Paper No. 4463. 18. Pierre-Andre Chiappori and Phil Reny (2005). “Matching to Share Risk,” Department of Economics, University of Chicago. 19. Richard Blundell, Luigi Pistaferri, and Ian Preston (2005). “Imputing Consumption in the PSID using Food Demand Estimates from the CEX,” The Institute of Fiscal Stduies WP04/27 20. Maurizio Mazzoco and Shiv Saini (2005). “Testing Efficient Risk Sharing with Heterogeneous Risk Preferences: Semi-parameteric Tests with an Application to Village Economies,” University of Wisconsin - Madison. 21. Martin Ljunge and Kelly Ragan (2005). “Labor Supply and the Tax Reform of the Century,” University of Chicago. 22. P. Monteiro (2005). “Testing the Complete Markets Assumption in the Frequency Domain,” University of Warwick. 23. Adriana Arreaza Coll (2005). “Income and Consumption Insurance in Latin America: The Role of Transfers, Fiscal Policy, Indebtedness,” Central Bank of Venezuela. 24. Sam Schulhofer-Wohl (200 6). “A Test of Consumption Insurance with Heterogeneous Preferences,” Department of Economics, University of Chicago. 25. Michael Hurd and Susann Rohwedder (2006). “Life-Cycle Consumption and Wealth Paths at Older Ages,” RAND and NBER. 26. Ge Yu (2006). “Excess Sensitivity of Consumption Using Micro Data in The UK,” MPRA Paper 548, University Library of Munich, Germany. 26 27. Pierre Dubois (2006). “Heterogeneity of Preferences, Limited Commitment and Coalitions: Empirical Evidence on the Limits to Risk Sharing in Rural Pakistan,” University de Toulouse. 28. Michael Pakos and Roni Israelov (2006). “Asset Pricing with Heterogeneous Consumers and Household Capital,” Carnegie Mellon University. 29. B. Ma (2006). “The Occupation, Marital Status and Fertility Choices of Women: A Life-Cycle Model,” UCLA. 30. Kevin X.D. Huang, Zheng Liu and John Q. Zhu (2007). “Temptation and Self-Control: Some Evidence and Applications,’ Working Papers 0711, Department of Economics, Vanderbilt University. 31. Bruce D. Meyer and Wallace K. C. Mok (2007). “Disability, Earnings, Income and Consumption,” Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies, University of Chicago and Department of Economics, Northwestern University. 32. A. Badel and M. Huggett (2007). “Interpreting Life-Cycle Inequality Patterns as an Efficient Alocation: Mission Impossible?” Georgetown University. 33. Michael P. Keane, Petra E. Todd, and Kenneth I. Wolpin (2010). “The Structural Estimation of Behavioral Models: Discrete Choice Dynamic Programming Methods and Applications,” manuscript. 34. Elizabeth Schroeder (2010). “A Semiparametric Life Cycle Labor Supply Model with Non-Additive Fixed Effects,” Manuscript, Georgetown University. 35. Joppe De Ree (2010). “Subjective Data in a Test of the Life Cycle Model,” Netspar Discussion Paper No. 10/2010-060. 36. Fichera, Eleonora (2010). “An analysis of households’ credit markets in Ethiopia and Malawi.” PhD thesis, University of Nottingham 37. Nobuhira Kiyotaki (2011). “A Mechanism Design Approach to Financial Frictions,” Prepared for the International Economic Association 2011 World Congress in Beijing. 38. Juan Pantano and Yu Zheng (2013). “Using Subjective Expectations Data to Allow for Unobserved Heterogeneity in Hotz-Miller Estimation Strategies,” Washington University in Saint Louis 39. Francisco Alvarez-Cuadradoa, Jose Maria Casadobx, Jose Maria Labeaga (2013). “Envy and Habits: Panel Data Estimates of Interdependent Preferences,” Banco de Espana, manuscript 40. Elizabeth Schroeder (2013). “A Semiparametric Life Cycle Labor Supply Model with Non-Additive Fixed Effects,” Oregon State University, manuscript 27 “The Effect of Work Experience on Female Wages and Labor Supply,” with R. Miller, 1998, 41 pages Review of Economic Studies 65, 45-85. 1. (*) V.J. Hotz and Robert A. Miller (1993). “Conditional Choice Probabilities and the Estimation of Dynamic Discrete Choice Models.” Review of Economic Studies 60, 497–529. 2. (*) V.J. Hotz, Robert A. Miller, Seth Sanders and Jeffrey Smith.“A Simulation Estimator for Dynamic Models of Discrete Choice.” Review of Economic Studies 61, 265–289. 3. (*) Victor Rios-Rull (1993). “Working in the Market, Working at Home, and the Acquisition of Skills: A General-Equilibrium Approach.” American Economic Review 83, 893–907. 4. Wolfgang Hardle and Oliver Linton (1994). “Applied Nonparametric Methods, In R.F. Engle and D.L. McFadden (eds.) Handbook of Econometrics Volume IV, Elsevier Science. 5. (*) Annamaria Lusardi (1996). “Permanent Income, Current Income and Consumption: Evidence from Two Panel Data Sets.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 14, 81–90. 6. Robert A. Miller (1996).“Estimating Models of Dynamic Optimization With Microeconomic Data.” In H. Pesaran and P. Schmidt (eds) Handbook of Applied Econometrics: Microeconomics, Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 7. Robert Miller and Seth Sanders (1997), “Human Capital Development and Welfare Participation,” Carnegie-Rochester Conference on Public Policy 46, 1-43. 8. (*) Robert A. Miller and H. Seig (1997). “Accounting for Differences in Preferences and Technologies Across Countries Through Their Impact on Household Behavior.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 15, 237–253. 9. (*) M. Keane and K. Wolpin (1997). “The Career Decisions of Young Men,” Journal of Political Economy 105, 473-522. 10. (*) R. Blundell, T. Magnac, and C. Meghir (1997). “Savings and Labor Market Transitions.“ Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 15, 153–164. 11. M. Dalal (1997). “Social Technology and Gender Inequality in Rural India,” In Economic Dimensions of Gender Inequality: A Global Perspective, By Janet M. Rives and Mahmood Yousefi (eds.), Greenwood Publishing Group. 12. M. Browning, L.P. Hansen, and J.J. Heckman (1999), “Micro Data and General Equilibrium Models,” in Handbook of Macroeconomics, (eds), John Taylor and Michael Woodford, North Holland. 28 13. Makot Saito (1999). “Dynamic Allocation and Pricing in Incomplete Markets,” Monetary and Economic Studies, May. 14. A. Pagan and A. Ullah (1999). Nonparametric Econometrics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 15. (*) J.J. Heckman (2001). “Micro Data, Heterogeneity, and the Evaluation of Public Policy: Nobel Lecture,” Journal of Political Economy 109, 673-748. 16. Toseef Azid, Muhammad Aslam, and Muhammad Omer Chaudhary (2001). “Poverty, Female Labour Force Participation, and Cottage Industry: A Case Study of Cloth Embroidery in Rural Multan,” The Pakistan Development Review, Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, vol. 40(4), pp. 1105-1118. 17. (*) T. Magnac and D. Thesmar (2002). “Identifying Dynamic Discrete Decision Processes,” Econometrica 70(2), 801-816. 18. (*) M. Francesconi (2002). “A Joint Dynamic Model of Fertility and Work of Married Women,” Journal of Labor Economics 20(2), 336-380. 19. (*) V. Aguirregabiria and P. Mira (2002). “Swapping the Nested Fixed Point Algorithm: A Class of Estimators for Discrete Markov Decision Models,” Econometrica 70(4), 1519-1543. 20. (*) Erosa A., Fuster L., and D. Restuccia (2002). “Fertility Decisions and Gender Differences in Labor Turnover, Employment, and Wages,” Review of Economic Dynamics 5 (4): 856-891. 21. (*) Caucutt E.M., Guner N., and J. Knowles (2002). “Why Do Women Wait? Matching, Wage Inequality, and the Incentives for Fertility Delay,” Review of Economic Dynamics 5 (4): 815-855. 22. (*) Chang Y.S., Gomes J.F., and F. Schorfheide (2002). “Learning-by-doing as a Propagation Mechanism,” American Economic Review 92 (5): 1498-1520. 23. (*) Houser D. (2003). “Bayesian Analysis of a Dynamic Stochastic Model of Labor Supply and Saving,” Journal of Econometrics 113 (2): 289-335. 24. (*) P. Rota (2004). “Estimating Labor Demand with Fixed Costs,” International Economic Review, 45, 25-48. 25. (*) S. Imai and M.P. Keane (2004). “Intertemporal Labor Supply and Human Capital Accumulation,” International Economic Review 45(2), 601-641. 26. (*) Hollifield, B., R.A. Miller, and P. Sandas (2004). “Empirical Analysis of Limit Orders,” Review of Economic Studies 71(4): 1027-1063. 29 27. (*) Bontempi, E., A. Del Boca, and A. Franzosi (2004). “Capital Heterogeneity: Does It Matter? Fundamental Q and Investment on a Panel of Italian Firms,” Rand Journal of Economics 35(4): 674-690. 28. (*) D. Lee and Kenneth I. Wolpin (2006). “Intersectoral Labor Mobility and the Growth of the Service Sector,” Econometrica 74 (1): 1-46. 29. (*) C. Olivetti (2006). “Changes in Women’s Hours of Market Work: The Role of Returns to Experience,” Review of Economic Dynamics 9, 557-587. 30. Richard Blundell, Thomas MaCurdy and Costas Meghir (2006). “Labor Supply Models: Unobserved Heterogeneity, Nonparticipation and Dynamics,” Handbook of Econometrics 6B. James J. Heckman and Edward Lazear, Amsterdam: Elsevier 31. (*) Paola Rota (2007). “Unidimensionality, Asymmetry and (S,s) Rules in Labour Demand,” Applied Economics, 39:14, 1797 - 1815 32. (*) M. Cunningham (2007). “Influences of Women’s Employment on the Gendered Division of Household Labor over the Life Course - Evidence from a 31-Year Panel Study,” Journal of Family Issues 28 (3): 422-444. 33. (*) Kim D.H. and Lee C. I. (2007). “On-the-job human capital accumulation in a real business cycle model: Implications for intertemporal substitution elasticity and labor hoarding,” Review of Economic Dynamics 10(3), pp. 494-518. 34. (*) George-Levi Gayle and Christian Viauroux (2007), “Root-N Consistent Semiparametric Estimators of A Dynamic Panel Sample Selection Model,” Journal of Econometrics 141, 179-212. 35. S. Bond and J. Van Reneen (2007). “Microeconometric Models of Investment and Employment,” In Handbook of Econometrics Volume 6A, (eds.) James J. Heckman and Edward E. Leamer, Amsterdam: Elsevier 36. (*) H. Kasahara and K. Shimotsu (2008). “Nested Pseudo-likelihood Estimation and Bootstrap based Inference for Structural Discrete Markov Decision Models,” Journal of Econometrics 146(1), 92-106. 37. (*) R.C. Sickles and Jenny Williams (2008). “Turning from Crime: A Dynamic Perspective,” Journal of Econometrics 145(1-2), 158-173. 38. (*) O. Attanasio, H. Low and V. Sanchez-Marco (2008). “Explaining Changes in Female Labor Supply in a Life-Cycle Model,” American Economic Review 98(4), 15171552. 39. (*) Jushan Bai (2009). “Panel Data Models with Interactive Fixed Effects,” Econometrica 77(4), 1229-1279. 30 40. National Foundation for Australian Women (2009). Tax Reform, Targeting and the Tax Burden on Women. Submission by the WomenSpeak Alliance and the National Foundation for Australian Women to the Review of Australia’s Future Tax System. 41. (*) Alison Aughinbaugh (2010). “The Effects of Remarriage on Women’s Labor Supply,” Journal of Population Economics 23, 1151-1176. 42. (*) Patricia Apps and Ray Rees (2010). “Australian Family Tax Reform and the Targeting Fallacy,” Australian Economic Review 43, 153-175. 43. (*) Victor Aguirregabiria and Pedro Mira (2010). “Dynamic Discrete Choice Structural Models: A Survey,” Journal of Econometrics 156, 38-67. 44. (*) Donghoon Lee and Kenneth Wolpin (2010). “Accounting for wage and employment changes in the US from 1968-2000: A dynamic model of labor market equilibrium,” Journal of Econometrics 156, 68-85. 45. (*) Attanasio, O. and G. Weber (2010). “Consumption and Saving: Models of Intertemporal Allocation and Their Implications for Public Policy,” Journal of Economic Literature 48, 693-751 46. (*) Arnaud Dupuy and Daniel Fernandez-Kranz (2010). “International Differences in the Family Gap in Pay: The Role of Labor Market Institutions,” Applied Economics 43, 413-438 47. (*) Z. Eckstein and O. Lifshitz (2011). “Dynamic Female Labor Supply,” Econometrica 79, 1675-1726 48. (*) Peter Arcidiacono and Robert A. Miller (2011). “CCP Estimation of Dynamic Discrete Choice Models with Unobserved Heterogeneity,” Econometrica 79, 1823-1867 49. (*) Peter Arcidiacono Peter and Paul B. Ellickson (2011). “Practical Methods for Estimation of Dynamic Discrete Choice Models,” Annual Review of Economics Arrow, K.J. and Bresnahan, T.F. (eds.) 3, 363-394. 50. (*) Yamaguchi, Shintaro, (2012). “Tasks and heterogeneous human capital,” Journal of Labor Economics 30.1: 1-53. 51. (*) Ellickson, Paul B., Sanjog Misra, and Harikesh S. Nair, (2012). “Repositioning dynamics and pricing strategy.” Journal of Marketing Research 49.6: 750-772. 52. Prowse, Victoria. (2012). “Modeling employment dynamics with state dependence and unobserved heterogeneity.” Journal of Business & Economic Statistics 30.3: 411431. 53. (*) Srisuma, Sorawoot, and Oliver Linton, (2012). “Semiparametric estimation of Markov decision processes with continuous state space.” Journal of Econometrics 166.2: 320-341. 31 54. Ferrall, Christopher (2012). “Explaining and Forecasting Results of The Self-Sufficiency Project,” The Review of Economic Studies 55. (*) Ali, Syed Zahid, Sajid Anwar, and Abbas Valadkhani, (2012). “Macroeconomic consequences of increased productivity in less developed economies,” Economic Modelling 29.3: 621-631. 56. Rosenbluth, Frances McCall, and Michael Weaver, (2012). “Time Is Money: How Motherhood Is Costly to Women and What to Do About It,” APSA Annual Meeting Paper. 57. (*) Yoganarasimhan, Hema, (2013). “The value of reputation in an online freelance marketplace,” Marketing Science 32.6: 860-891. 58. Scott, Paul T. (2013). “Dynamic Discrete Choice Estimation of Agricultural Land Use.” Toulouse School of Economics. 59. (*) Buttet, Sebastien, and Alice Schoonbroodt, (2013). “An accounting exercise for the shift in life-cycle employment profiles of married women born between 1940 and 1960.” Journal for Labour Market Research 46.3: 253-271. 60. (*) Khorunzhina, Natalia, (2013). “Structural estimation of stock market participation costs.” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 37.12: 2928-2942. 61. (*) Belfield, Chris, et al. (2014). “Living standards, poverty and inequality in the UK: 2014.” Institute for Fiscal Studies London. 62. (*) Kang, Ari, Richard Lowery, and Malcolm Wardlaw, (2014). “The Costs of Closing Failed Banks: A Structural Estimation of Regulatory Incentives*.” Review of Financial Studies: hhu076. 63. (*) Dechter, Evgenia Kogan, (2014). “Maternity Leave, Effort Allocation, and Postmotherhood Earnings.” Journal of Human Capital 8.2: 97-125. 64. (*) Gonzlez, Roberto, and Hector Sala, (2015). “The Frisch Elasticity in the Mercosur Countries: A Pseudo-Panel Approach.” Development Policy Review 33.1: 107-131. 65. (*) Ari Kang, Richard Lowery, and Malcom Wardlaw (2014). “The Costs of Closing Failed Banks: A Structural Estimation of Regulatory Incentives,” Review of Financial Studies Working Papers 1. James J. Heckman, Lance Lochner, and Ricardo Cossa (2002). “Learning-by-Doing Vs. On-the-Job Training: Using Variation Induced by the EITC to Distinguish between Models of Skill Formation,” NBER Working Papers 9083, National Bureau of Economic Research. 32 2. George-Levi Gayle and Robert A. Miller (2002). “Human Capital Accumulation and Life-Cycle Fertility,” Carnegie Mellon University 3. Virgina Sanchez-Marcos (2002). “Women’s Labor Supply and Fertility in Spain over the Last Twenty Years, Manuscript, Universidad de Cantabria. 4. M. Doepke, M. Hazan, and Y.D. Maoz (2005). “The Baby Boom and World War II: The Role of Labor Market Experience,” Preliminary draft, University of Haifa. 5. Bradley T. Heim (2005). “The Incredible Shrinking Elasticities: Married Female Labor Supply, 1979-2003,” Duke University Working Paper. 6. Francois Guorio and Pierre-Alexander Noual (2006). “The Marginal Worker and the Aggregate Elasticity of Labor Supply,” Manuscript. 7. Sebastien Buttet and Alice Schoonbroodt (2006). “An Accounting Exercise for the Shift in Life-Cycle Employment Profiles of Married Women Born between 1940 and 1960,” Manuscript, Cleveland State University. 8. Salvador Balle and Amedeo Spadaro (2006). “Optimal Nonlinear Labor Income Taxation in Dynamic Economies,” ECINEEQ 2006-19. 9. W. R. Gayle (2006). “A Dynamic Structural Model of Labor Supply and Educational Attainment,” University of Pittsburgh. 10. Sebastien Buttet and Alice Schoonbroodt (2006). “Changes in Womens Employment Across Cohorts: The Effect of Number and Timing of Births,” Manuscript. 11. Victoria Prowse (2007). “Modeling Employment Dynamics with State Dependence and Unobserved Heterogeneity,” University of Oxford Discussion Paper Series ISSN 1471-0498. 12. J. Adda, C. Dustmann and K. Stevens (2007). “Occupational Choice and Fertility,” UCL and Institute for Fiscal Studies. 13. Victor Aguirregabiria (2007). “Another Look at the Identification of Dynamic Discrete Decision Processes: With an Application to Retirement Behavior,” University of Toronto. 14. Elizabeth Potamides (2007). “Why Do Black Women Work More? A Comparison of White and Black Women’s Labor Supply,” New York University. 15. Johannes Geyer and Viktor Steiner (2007). “Short-Run and Long-Term Effects of Childbirth on Mothers Employment and Working Hours Across Institutional Regimes: An Empirical Analysis Based on the European Community Household Panel,” IZA Discussion Papers 2693, Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA). 16. Jane Leber Herry (2008). “Does it Pay to Delay? Decomposing the Effect of First Birth Timing on Womens Wage Growth,” University of California, Berkeley. 33 17. Juan Esteban Carranza and Salvador Navarro (2011). “Identification of dynamic models with aggregate shocks with an application to mortgage default in Colombia,” ICESI (Colombia) and University of Western Ontario 18. William Ben Peterman (2011). “Optimal Taxation in Life-cycle Models,” Ph.D Thesis, University of California, San Diego 19. Khorunzhina, Natalia, (2012). “Dynamic Stock Market Participation of Households with Heterogeneous Participation Costs,” The 39th European Finance Association Annual Meeting (EFA 2012). 20. Arcidiacono, Peter, and R. Miller. (2013). “Identifying dynamic discrete choice models off short panels,” Carnegie-Mellon University, manuscript 21. Gayle, W. (2013). “CCP Estimation of Dynamic Discrete/Continuous Choice Models with Generalized Finite Dependence and Correlated Unobserved Heterogeneity,” Washington University in St. Louis, manuscript 22. Merih Kavvas (2013). “Wage Differentials, Age and Human Capital among Engineering and Business Graduates in Portugal (2000-2009),” Thesis to obtain the Master of Science Degree in Industrial Engineering and Management, Tecnico Lisboa 23. Shintaro Yamaguchi (2014). “Dynamic Effects of Parental Leave Policy on Female Labor Market Outcomes,”McMaster University, 24. Ransom, Tyler (2014). “The Effect of Business Cycle Fluctuations on Migration Decisions,” Duke University, manuscript 25. Victor Aguirregabiria and Arvind Magesan (2014). “Estimation and Counterfactuals in Dynamic Discrete Games Using an Euler-Equations Policy-Iteration Mapping,” University of Toronto, manuscript 26. Tess M. Stafford and Scott T. French (2014). “Experience and the Wage Elasticity of Labor Supply,” The University of New South Wales manuscript 27. Gizem Kosar (2014). “Does the Earned Income Tax Credit Help Single Women Climb the Wage Ladder?”, manuscript, Johns Hopkins University 28. Arcidiacono, Peter, and Robert A. Miller. (2014). “Nonstationary Dynamic Models with Finite Dependence,” Carnegie-Mellon University, manuscript 29. George Gale, Limor Golan and mehmet Soytas (2014). “Estimation of Dynastic LifeCycle Discrete Choice Models.” Washington University in St. Louis, manuscript 30. Chris Redl (2015). “Optimal Monetary Policy with Learning by Doing,” Economic Research Southern Africa (ERSA) Working Paper 490 34 “Time-to-Build, Delivery Lags, and the Equilibrium Pricing of Capital Goods,” Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 25, (1993), 301–319. 1. (*) Kenneth J. Singleton (1985). “Discussion on ‘Adjustment Costs and Capital Asset Pricing’ by Gregory Huffman.” Journal of Finance, 2. Thomas J. Sargent (1987). Dynamic Macroeconomic Theory. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, p. 128. 3. (*) Michael R. Montgomery (1995). “ ‘Time-to-Build’ Completion Patterns for Nonresidential Structures, 1961–1991.” Economics Letters 48, 155–163. Paper. 4. (*) S. Oliner, G. Rudebusch, and D. Sichel (1995). “New and Old Models of Business Investment – A Comparison of Forecasting Performance.” Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 27, 806–826. Also in Business Cycles, (1999), (eds.) Francis Diebold and Glenn Rudebusch, Princeton: Princeton University Press. 5. Tyler Cowen (1997). Risk Business cycles: New and Old Austrian Perspectives, London and New York: Routledge 6. S. Altug, F. Demers, and M. Demers (1999). “Cost Uncertainty, Taxation, and Irreversible Investment.” In Current Trends in Economics: Theory and Applications, Springer-Verlag Studies in Economic Theory Volume 8, (eds.) A. Alkan, C.D. Aliprantis, and N.C. Yannelis. 7. (*) Chunsheng Zhou (2000). “Time-to-Build and Investment,”Review of Economics and Statistics 82, 273-282. 8. (*) R. Chami, T.F. Cosimano, C. Fullenkamp (2001), “Capital Trading, Stock Trading, and the Inflation Tax on Equity,” Review of Economic Dynamics 4 (3), 575-606. 9. (*) Edge R. M. (2007). “Time-to-build, Time-to-plan, Habit-persistence, and the Liquidity Effect,” Journal of Monetary Economics 54(6): pp. 1644-1669. 10. (*) Ulrich Brandt-Pollmann, Ralph Winkler, Sebastian Sager, Ulf Moslener and Johannes P. Schlder (2008). “Numerical Solution of Optimal Control Problems with Constant Control Delays,” Computational Economics, 31(2), 181-206. 11. (*) Yishay Maoz (2008). “Time-to-Build and the Inverse U-Shape Investment-Uncertainty Relationship,” BE Press Topics in Theoretical Economics, 8(1). 12. (*) Alessandra del Boca, Marzio Galeotti, Charles P. Himmelberg and Paolo Rota (2008). “Investment and Time to Plan: A Comparison of Structures vs. Equipment in an Italian Panel of Firms,” Journal of the European Economic Association 6(4), 864-889. 35 Working Papers 1. Pingfan Hong (1995). “Determinants of Investment and Policy Implications With a Comparative Study of Investment Functions in the LINK Models,” United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) 2. C.P. Himmelberg (2000). “The Stock Market and Corporate Investment: Evidence on net Worth Effects,” Columbia University. 3. Stephen Murchison, Andrew Rennison, and Zhenzhua Zhu (2004). “A Structural Small Open-Economy Model for Canada,” Bank of Canada Working Paper. 4. Lu Zhang (2005). “The Q-theoretical Link between Stock and Investment Returns,” Simon School of Business, University of Rochester and NBER 5. Jonathan N. Millar (2005). “Gestation Lags and the Relationship Between Investment and Q in Regressions,” Finance and Economics Discussion Series, Divisions of Research & Statistics and Monetary Affairs, Federal Reserve Board Staff Papers 2005/28 6. Issouf Samake (2008). “Investment and Growth Dynamics: An Empirical Assessment Applied to Benin,” IMF Working Paper No. 08/120. 7. Lars-Alexander Kuehn (2009). “Disentangling Investment Returns and Stock Returns: The Importance of Time-to-Build,” Carnegie Mellon University - David A. Tepper School of Business. 8. Lars-Alexander Kuehn (2009). “Time-to-Build and Asset Prices,” University of British Columbia. 9. Jecheche, Petros (2011). “Investment and growth relationship: an empirical assessment in Zimbabwe,” Academic and Business Research Institute 10. Zhanhui Chen (2011). “Time-to-Produce, Inventory, and Asset Prices,” Nanyang Technological University (NTU) 36 “The Effect of Insider Trading by a Dominant Trader in a Simple Securities Market Model,” University of Minnesota ERC Discussion Paper No. 212, May, 1991. 1. (*) Thomas R. Palfrey and Sanjay Srivastava (1986). “Private Information in Large Economies.” Journal of Economic Theory 39, 34–58. 2. Kenneth J. Singleton (1987). “Asset Prices in a Time Series Model with Disparately Informed Traders.” In New Approaches to Monetary Economics, Proceedings of the Second International Symposium in Economic Theory and Econometrics, edited by William A. Barnett and Kenneth J. Singleton, Cambridge University Press, 249–272. 3. Kenneth J. Singleton (1987). “Speculation and the Volatility of Foreign Currency Exchange Rates.” Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 28, 9–56. 4. (*) Lawrence R. Glosten (1989). “Insider Trading, Liquidity, and the Role of the Monopolist Specialist.” Journal of Business, 92, 211-235. 5. (*) J.J. Laffont and Eric Maskin (1990). “The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Insider Trading on the Stock Market.” Journal of Political Economy 98, 70–93. 6. Kenneth J. Singleton (1990). “Specification and Estimation of Intertemporal Asset Pricing Models.” in Handbook of Monetary Economics, Vol. I, edited by B. M. Friedman and F. H. Hahn, Elsevier Science Publishers. Working Papers 1. Murali Agastya and Richard Holden (2004). “Boesky Insiders, Informational Efficiency and Allocative Inefficiency,” University of Sydney and Harvard University 37 “Are Technology Shocks Nonlinear? with R. Ashley and D. Patterson, Macroeconomic Dynamics, 3(4), 506-533, 1999 1. Douglas M. Patterson and Richard A. Ashley (2000). A Nonlinear Time Series Workshop: A Toolkit for Detecting and Identifying Nonlinear Serial Dependence. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. 2. William A. Brock (2001). “Complexity-based Methods in Cycles and Growth: Any Potential Value-added?” In Cycles, Growth and Structural Change: Theories and Empirical Evidence, Lionello F. Punzo (ed.). 3. S. Holly, P. Turner and M. Weeks (2003). “Asymmetric Adjustment and Bias in Estimation of an Equilibrium Relationship from a Cointegrating Regression,” Computational Economics, 21, 195-202. 4. Debra Ann Skaradzinski (2003). “The Nonlinear Behavior of Stock Prices: The Impact of Firm Size, Seasonality, and Trading Frequency,” Dissertation in Finance, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. 5. (*) Gary D. Hansen and Edward C. Prescott (2005). “Capacity Constraints, Asymmetries, and the Business Cycle,” Review of Economic Dynamics 8(4): 850-865. 6. (*) Ashley, R.A. and Patterson D.M. (2006). “Evaluating the Effectiveness of StateSwitching Time Series Models for US Real Output,” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, 24(3), 266-277. 7. (*) Diego Valderrama (2007). “Statistical Nonlinearities in the Business Cycle: A Challenge for the Canonical RBC Model,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 31(9), pp. 2957-2983. 8. (*) Lee, Chien-Chiang, Ching-Chuan Tsong, and Cheng-Feng Lee, (2014). “Testing for the efficient market hypothesis in stock prices: International evidence from nonlinear heterogeneous panels.” Macroeconomic Dynamics 18.04: 943-958. Working Papers 1. Richard Ashley and Douglas Patterson (1998). “A Direct Comparison of the BDS, Hinich, and Other Tests for the Presence of Nonlinear Dependence in Time Series,” Unpublished Manuscript. 2. Gwen Eudey and Roberto Perli (1999). “Regime-Switching in Expectations over the Business Cycle,” Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Research Department Working Paper No. 99-17. 3. R. Verbrugge (1999), “A Cross-Country Investigation of Macroeconomic Asymmetries,” Unpublished Manuscript. 4. Paolo Piselli (2004). “Business Cycle Non-linearities and Productivity Shocks,” Bank of Italy Working Paper Number 516 38 “Political Risk and Irreversible Investment,” with F. Demers and M. Demers, CES-ifo Economic Studies 53(3), 430-465, 2007. 1. (*) Dogan Titiroglu, Harjeet Bhabra, and Ugur Lel (2003). “Political Risk and Asset Valuation: Evidence from Business Reallocations in Canada,” Journal of Banking and Finance 28, 2237-2258. 2. Shanker A. Singham and D. Daniel Sokol (2004). “Public Sector Restraints: Behindthe-Border Trade Barriers,” Texas International Law Journal, 39, pp. 625. 3. Marcus Miller, Kannika Thampanishvong and Lei Zhang (2005). “Learning to Trust Lula: Contagion and Political Risk in Brazil,”In F. Giavazzi, I. Goldfajn and S. Herrera (eds) Inflation Targeting, Debt, and the Brazilian Experience, 1999 to 2003, MIT Press. 4. (*) Marie-Claude Beaulieu, Jean-Claude Cosset, and Naceur Essaddam (2005). “The Impact of Political Risk on the Volatility of Stock Returns: The Case of Canada,” Journal of International Business Studies 36 (6): 701-718. 5. (*) Marie-Claude Beaulieu, Jean-Claude Cosset, and Naceur Essaddam (2006). “Political Risk and Stock Market Returns: Evidence from the 1995 Quebec Referendum,” Canadian Journal of Economics 39(2), 621-641. 6. Aldo Spanjer (2008). “European Gas Regulation – A Theoretical Critique,” In Energy in Europe: Economics, Policy and Strategy, F. Magnusson and O. Bengtsson (eds), Nova Science Publishers. 7. Aldo Spanjer (2008). “Do Article 22 Exemptions Adequately Stimulate Investments in European Gas Markets?” Zeitschrift fr Erziehungswissenschaft 32, 46-51. 8. (*) Aldo Spanjer (2009). “Regulatory Intervention on the Dynamic European Gas Market Neoclassical Economics or Transaction Cost Economics?,” Energy Policy 37, 3250-3258. Jack E. Wahl and Udo Broll (2010). “Mitigation of Foreign Direct Investment Risk and Hedging,” Frontiers in Finance and Economics, SKEMA Business School, vol. 7(1), pages 21-33, April 9. (*) Jocab Dearmon and Robin Gier (2011). “Trust and the accumulation of physical and human capital,” European Journal of Political Economy 27, 507-519. 10. Graham, Roger C., Cameron K.J. Morrill, and Janet B. Morrill, (2012). “Does it matter where assets are held and income is derived? Further evidence of differential value relevance from Quebec.” Journal of International Accounting, Auditing and Taxation 21.2: 185-197. 11. Marvasti, Akbar, (2013). “The role of price expectations and legal uncertainties in ocean mineral, exploration activities,” Resources Policy 38.1: 68-74. 39 Working Papers 1. Paolo Panteghini and Carlo Scarpa (2005). “Profit Sharing, Investment and Regulatory Risk,” University of Brescia. 2. Amihai Glazer and Stef Proost (2008). “Signaling Commitment by Excessive Spending,” Working Papers 070811, University of California-Irvine, Department of Economics. 3. Muhammad Tahir Suleman (2009). “Risk Involved in International Debt Investment in Emerging Markets,” Hanken School of Economics - Department of Finance and Statistics “The Impact of Tax Risk and Persistence on Investment Decisions,” Economics Bulletin 5, 1-6, 2001 with Fanny S. Demers and Michel Demers 1. (*) G. Pawlina and P.M. Kort (2005). “Investment under Uncertainty and Policy Change,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 29 (7): 1193-1209. 2. (*) Georg Schneider and Caren Sureth (2010).“Capitalized Investments with Entry and Exit Options and Paradoxical Tax Effects,” Review of Managerial Science March. 3. Rainer Niemann and Caren Sureth (2011). “The Impact of Differential Capital Incme Taxation on the Value of Risky Projects,” Economics Bulletin 31(2), 1047-1054 Working Papers 1. Paolo Panteghini and Carlo Scarpa (2003). “Irreversible Investments and Regulatory Risk,” CESifo Working Paper Series CESifo Working Paper No., CESifo GmbH. 2. Thomas Gries, Ulrich Prior, and Caren Sureth (2007). “Taxation of Risky Investment and Paradoxical Investor Behavior,” Discussion Papers on Tax Research ISBN 18618944. “The Investment Tax Credit and Irreversible Investment,” with Fanny S. Demers and Michel Demers. Journal of Macroeconomics 31, , 509–522, 2009. 1. Altug, Sumru, and nal Zenginobuz (2009). “ What has been the role of investment in Turkey’s growth performance?,” In Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era 123. 2. Altug, Sumru (2010). Business Cycles: Fact, Fallacy and Fantasy, World Scientific. 3. S. G. Cardoso, F. J. Mostert, J. H. Mostert (2011). “Financial Incentives to Enhance Capital Investments in the Emerging Market Economy of South Africa,” Corporate Ownership & Control Volume 8, Issue 3, Continued - 290-296 40 “Sources of Long-term Economic Growth for Turkey, 1880-2005,” with Alpay Filiztekin and S¸evket Pamuk, European Review of Economic History, 12(3), 393-430, 2008. 1. (*) Z. Onis and I.E. Bayram (2008). “A Temporary Star or Emerging Tiger? Turkey’s Recent Performance in a Global Setting,” New Perspectives on Turkey 39, 47-84. 2. Bogart, D. (2009). “Nationalizations and the Development of Transport Systems: Cross-Country Evidence from Railroad Networks, 1860-1912,” Journal of Economic History 69, pp. 202-237. 3. Sumru Altug and Unal Zenginobuz (2009). “Investment and Growth in Turkey,” (2009). In Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration ¨ s. London: Routledge, pp. 123-144. in the Post-Crisis Era, (eds.) F. S¸enses and Z. Oni¸ 4. (*) Leandro Prados de la Escosura and Joan R. Rossa (2009). “The Sources of LongRun Growth in Spain, 1850-2000,” Journal of Economic History, 69:1063-1091 5. S¸evket Pamuk (2010). “Economic Growth and Institutional Change in Turkey before 1980,” In Understanding the Process of Economic Change in Turkey, Editors: T. C ¸ etin, F. Yilmaz, pp. 15-30, Nova Science Publishers. 6. (*) Senay Acikgoz and Mert Merter (2010). “The Endogeneity of the Natural Rate of Growth: An Application to Turkey,” Panoeconomicus 57, 447-469. 7. (*) Prado de la Escosura Leandro (2010). “Improving Human Development: A Longrun View,” Journal of Economic Surveys 24, 841-894 8. (*) Ayca Akarcay Gurbuz (2011). “Comparing trajectories of structural change,” Cambridge Journal of Economics 35, 1061-1085 9. (*) Deniz Cicek and Ceyhun Elgin (2011). “Accounting for Turkish Business Cycles,” Iktisat, Isletme ve Finans 26, 9-32 10. (*) Deniz Cicek and Ceyhun Elgin (2011). “Not-quite-great depressions of Turkey: A quantitative analysis of economic growth over 19682004,” Economic Modelling 28, 26912700 11. B. Fortna (2011). Learning to Read in the Late Ottoman Empire and the Early Turkish Republic, Palgrave MacMillan, 1-247 12. Arisoy, Ibrahim. (2012). “The impact of foreign direct investment on total factor productivity and economic growth in Turkey.” The Journal of Developing Areas 46.1: 17-29. 13. Duzgun, Eren, (2012). “Class, State and Property: Modernity and Capitalism in Turkey,” European Journal of Sociology 53.02: 119-148. 41 14. Elgin, Ceyhun, and Tolga Umut Kuzubas (2012). “Wage-Productivity gap in Turkish manufacturing sector,” Iktisat Isletme ve Finans 27.316: 09-31. 15. Cengiz, Sibel, Afsin Sahin, and Gulbahar Atasever (2012). “The determinants of the Turkish agricultural employment,” Young Economists Journal/Revista Tinerilor Economisti 9.19. 16. Ogus, Ayla, and Sacit Hadi Akdede. “The effect of democratization on growth of developing countries,” Economics of Developing Countries: 415. 17. Park, Bill, (2013). Modern Turkey: People, State and Foreign Policy in a Globalised World, Routledge. 18. Van Leeuwen, Bas, and Pter Fldvri, (2013). “Capital accumulation and growth in Central Europe, 1920-2006,” Eastern European Economics 51.5: 69-93. 19. Pamuk, Sevket (2013). Economic growth and institutional change in Turkey before 1980, Nova Science Publishers . 20. Kulali, Ihsan, and Yavuz Goktaylar (2013). “The formal independence of regulatory authorities in Turkey,” International Journal of Management and Network Economics 3.1: 22-38. 21. Mousseau, Demet Yalcin (2013). “Political Stability and Economic Expansion,” The Great Catalyst: European Union Project and Lessons from Greece and Turkey: 225. 22. Fedderke, J. W., and T. E. Kaya (2013). “Productivity Impact of Infrastructure in Turkey, 1987-2006,” Journal of Infrastructure Systems 20.3. 23. Pamuk, Sevket (2013). “From The Nineteenth Century,” The Routledge Handbook of Modern Turkey 44. 24. (*) Imrohoroglu, Ayse, Selahattin Imrohoroglu, and Murat Ungor (2014). “Agricultural productivity and growth in Turkey,” Macroeconomic Dynamics 18.05: 998-1017. 25. Atiyas, Izak, and Ozan Bakis (2014). “Aggregate and sectoral TFP growth in Turkey: A growth accounting exercise,” Iktisat Isletme ve Finans. 26. Ungor, Murat (2014). “Some thought experiments on the changes in labor supply in Turkey,” Economic Modelling 39: 265-272. 27. Ungor, Murat (2014). “Some Observations on the Convergence Experience of Turkey,” Comparative Economic Studies 56.4: 696-719. 28. (*) Ozturan, Peren, Aysegul Ozsomer, and Rik Pieters (2014). “The Role of Market Orientation in Advertising Spending During Economic Collapse: The Case of Turkey in 2001,” Journal of Marketing Research 51.2: 139-152. 42 29. (*) Acikgoz, Senay, and Merter Mert (2014). “Sources of growth revisited: The importance of the nature of technological progress,” Journal of Applied Economics 17.1: 31-62. Working Papers 1. Bogart, D. (2008). “Developmental States?: Explaining Cross-Country Differences in Private vs. State Ownership of New Railroad Miles, 1860-1912,” UC Irvine. 2. Matthias Morys and Martin Ivanov (2009). “Common factors in South-east Europe’s Business Cycles 1889-1989,’ University of York, manuscript. 3. A. Imrohoroglu, S. Imrohoroglu, and M. Ungor (2010). “Agricultural Productivity and Growth in Turkey,” USC, manuscript. 4. Sebnem Kalemli-Ozcan and Alex Nikolsko-Rzhevskyy (2010). “Does Trade Cause Capital to Flow? Evidence from Historical Rainfalls,” NBER Working Paper 16034. 5. Dani Rodrik (2010). “Structural Transformation and Economic Development,” Merih Celasun Memorial Lecture, TEPAV 6. Jose Diaz and Gert Wagner (2010). “Two Centuries of Latin American Productivity Growth: Chile, 1833-2005,” manuscript. 7. G¨on¨ ul S¸eng¨ ul and Murat Ing¨or (2011). “Increasing Share of Agriculture in Employment in a Time of Crisis: Puzzle or Not?” CBRT Working Paper 11/05 8. Williamson, Jeffrey G. (2011). “Industrial Catching Up in the Poor Periphery 18701975” CEPR Discussion Papers 8335, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers 9. Ceyhun Elgin and Tolga Umut Kuzubas (2012). “Wage-Productivity Gap in Turkish Manufacturing Sector,” Working Papers 2012/03, Bogazici University, Department of Economics. 10. Utku-Ismihan, Fatma M. (2012). “The Role of Knowledge on Economic Growth: The Case of Turkey, 1963-2010,” Science and Technology Policies Research Center TEKPOL Working Paper Series, STPS-WP-12/07. 11. Ungor, Murat (2013). “Did the Rising Importance of Services Decelerate Overall Productivity Improvement of Turkey during 2002-2007?,” Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey Working Paper 13: 15. 43 “Scale Effects, Time-Varying Markups, and the Cyclical Behaviour of Primal and Dual Productivity,” with Alpay Filiztekin, Applied Economics, vol 34(13), pp. 1687-1702, 2002. 1. (*) Peter Spencer (2002). “The Impact of ICT Investment on UK Productive Potential, 1986-2000: New Statistical Methods and Tests,” Manchester School 70, 107-126 2. (*) X. Rauricha, H. Salac, and V. Sorollae (2011). “Factor shares, the price markup, and the elasticity of substitution between capital and labor,” Journal of Macroeconomics Working Papers 1. Gabriel J. Felbermayr and Omar Licandro (2002). “A Two-Sectors AK Model and the Relative Price of Investment,” European University Institute. 2. Pierre Lafourcade (2003). “Asset Prices and Rents in a GE model with Imperfect Competition,” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2003-60, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System . 3. Klaus Wlde and Pia Weiss (2004). “International Competition, Slim Firms and Wage Inequality,” CESifo Working Paper Series CESifo Working Paper No., CESifo GmbH. 4. Hagemejer, Jan, and Piotr Popowski (2012). “The distribution of monopolistic markups in the Polish economy.” “Bank Lending with Spillover Effects and Imperfect Competition,” with Murat Usman, B.E. Journals in Macroeconomics: Topics in Macroeconomics, 2006 6(1), July. 1. Paola Dongili (2005). “Interdipendenza fra sistema reale e finanziario: una rilettura alla luce dellinsegnamento del prof. Menegazzi,” Working Papers 29, Universit di Verona, Dipartimento di Scienze economiche. “Inflation, Asset Returns, and Real Activity: The Case of Mexico and Turkey,” with Kamil Yilmaz, Bo˘gazi¸ci Journal, 1998 1. (*) E. Alper (2002), “Business Cycles, Excess Volatility, and Capital Flows – Evidence from Mexico and Turkey,” Emerging Markets Finance and Trade 38(4), 25-48. 2. O. Aslan and L. Korap (2007). “Monetary Transmission Mechanism in an Open Economy Framework: The Case of Turkey,” Ekonometri ve Istatistik 5, pp. 42-66. 3. Nihat I¸sik ve Mustafa Acar. “Enflasyonla M¨ ucadelede Politika Aracı Se¸cimi: Bir ¨ Vektor Otoregresyon (VAR) Analizi,” Sel¸cuk Universitesi Karaman Iktisadi ve Idari Bilimler Fak¨ ultesi. 4. Alacahan, Nur Dilbaz (2012). “Turkiye Ekonomisinde Is Cevrimleri Kurami (19982011): Hodrick-Prescott Filtresi,” Ynetim Bilimleri Dergisi 10.20. 44 “Productivity and Growth, 1923-2003,” with Alpay Filiztekin. In The Turkish Economy: The Real Economy, Corporate Governance, and Reform. (eds.) S. Altug and A. Filiztekin, Routledge Studies on Middle Eastern Economics, Routledge, pp. 15-62, 2006. 1. Lauren M. McLaren (2008). Constructing Democracy in Southern Europe: A Comparative Analysis of Italy, Spain, and Turkey, Routledge 2. Tevfik F. Nas (2008). Tracing the Economic Transformation of Turkey from the 1920s to EU Accession, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 3. Erol Taymaz and Ebru Voyvoda (2009). “Industrial Restructuring and Technological capabilities in Turkey,” In Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Global Economy, edited by Ziya Onis, Fikret Senses. Routledge 4. Murat Ungor (2014). “Some Observations on the Convergence Experience of Turkey,” Comparative Economic Studies (2014) 56, 696719. 5. Fedderke, J. and Kaya, T. (2014). “Productivity Impact of Infrastructure in Turkey, 19872006,” Journal of Infrastructure Systems 20(3), 04014011. 45 “Cyclical Dynamics of Industrial Production and Employment: Markov Chain-based Estimates and Tests,” with Baris Tan and Gozde Gencer, (2012). Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 36, 1534–1550. 1. (*) Altug, Sumru, and Fabio Canova. ”Do Institutions and Culture Matter for Business Cycles?,” (2014). Open Economies Review 25.1: 93-122. “Business Cycles in Developed and Emerging Economies: Evidence based on a Univariate Markov Switching Approach,” with Melike Bildirici, Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 48(6), pp. 73-106 2012 1. (*) Altug, Sumru, Bilin Neyapti, and Mustafa Emin (2012). “Institutions and business cycles,” International Finance 15.3: 347-366. 2. Altug, Sumru, Baris Tan, and Gozde Gencer (2012). “Cyclical dynamics of industrial production and employment: Markov chain-based estimates and tests,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 36.10: 1534-1550. 3. (*) Camacho, Mximo, and Gabriel Perez-Quiros (2014). “Commodity prices and the business cycle in Latin America: Living and dying by commodities?,” Emerging Markets Finance and Trade 50.2: 110-137. 4. (*) Altug, Sumru, and Fabio Canova (2013). “Do institutions and culture matter for business cycles?,” Open Economies Review 25.1: 93-122. 5. (*) Caldern, Csar, and J. Rodrigo Fuentes (2014). “Have business cycles changed over the last two decades? An empirical investigation,” Journal of Development Economics 109: 98-123. 6. Altug, Sumru, and Erhan Uluceviz (2014). “Identifying leading indicators of real activity and inflation for Turkey, 1988-2010,” OECD Journal: Journal of Business Cycle Measurement and Analysis 2014.1 (2014): 1-37. 7. (*) Akkoyun, Huseyin Cagri, Bahar Sen-Dogan, and Mahmut Gunay (2014). “Business Cycle Synchronization of Turkey with the Eurozone and the United States: What Has Changed Since 2001?,” Emerging Markets Finance and Trade 50.4: 26-41. 46 “Institutions and Business Cycles” (2012), with Bilin Neyapti and Mustafa Emin, International Finance, Winter 15(3), pp. 347-366. 1. Gnocchi, Stefano, Andresa Lagerborg, and Evi Pappa (2015). “Do labor market institutions matter for business cycles?,”Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 51: 299-317. 2. (*) Altug, Sumru, and Fabio Canova (2014). “Do institutions and culture matter for business cycles?,” Open Economies Review 25.1: 93-122. 3. (*) Canova, Fabio, and Alain Schlaepfer (2014). “Has The Euro-Mediterrannean Partnership Affected Mediterranean Business Cycles?” Journal of Applied Econometrics. 4. Altug, Sumru, and Erhan Uluceviz (2014). “Identifying leading indicators of real activity and inflation for Turkey, 1988-2010.” OECD Journal: Journal of Business Cycle Measurement and Analysis 2014.1: 1-37. 5. (*) Benczr, Pter, and Attila Rtfai (2014). “Business Cycles Around the Globe: Some Key Facts,” Emerging Markets Finance and Trade 50.2: 102-109. 6. (*) Neyapti, Bilin (2013). “Turkey’s experience with disinflation: where did all the welfare gains go?” Applied Economics Letters 20.7: 664-668. 7. (*) Canova, Fabio, and Matteo Ciccarelli (2012) “ClubMed? Cyclical fluctuations in the Mediterranean basin,” Journal of International Economics 88.1: 162-175. 8. Altug, Sumru, Baris Tan, and Gzde Gencer (2012). “Cyclical dynamics of industrial production and employment: Markov chain-based estimates and tests,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 36.10: 1534-1550. “Do Institutions and Culture Matter for Business Cycles?”, with Fabio Canova, Open Economies Review 25(1), 93-122, 2014. 1. Erdem, Fatma Pinar, and Erdal Ozmen (2014). “Exchange Rate Regimes and Business Cycles: An Empirical Investigation,” ERC-Economic Research Center No. 1404., Middle East Technical University. 2. (*) Chang, Yongsung, and Sunoong Hwang (2014). “Asymmetric Phase Shifts in US Industrial Production Cycles.” Review of Economics and Statistics (2014). 3. (*) Sette, Enrico, and Giorgio Gobbi (2014). “Relationship Lending during a Financial Crisis,” Journal of the European Economic Association. 4. (*) Nieminen, Mika (2014). “Trade imbalances within the euro area and with respect to the rest of the world.” Economic Modelling. 47 “Identifying Leading Indicators of Real Activity and Inflation for Turkey”, 1988-2010: A Pseudo Out-of-Sample Forecasting Approach, with Erhan Uluceviz, Journal of Business Cycle Measurement and Analysis 2, 1-37, 2014. 1. Altug, Sumru and Cem Cakmakli (2015). “Forecasting Inflation using Survey Expectations and Target Inflation: Evidence for Brazil and Turkey,” forthcoming, International Journal of Forecasting 2. Burcu G¨ urcihan Y¨ unc¨ uler, G¨on¨ ul Seng¨ ul, Arzu Yavuz (2014). “Quest for Leading Indicators of the Turkish Unemployment Rate,” Central Bank Review Vol. 14, pp.23-45 Working Papers 1. Altug, Sumru, and Cem C ¸ akmaklı(2014). “Inflation Targeting and Inflation Expectations: Evidence for Brazil and Turkey.” ERF Working Paper No. 1413. ¨ 2. Andi¸c, Selen Ba¸sar and Fethi Ogunc (2015). “Variable Selection for Inflation: A Pseudo Out-of-Sample Approach,” CBRT WP 15/06. 48 Dynamic Choice and Asset Markets, with P. Labadie, San Diego: Academic Press, 1995, 374 pages. 1. Christian Zimmerman (1996). “A Real Business Cycle Bibliography,” CREFE Working Paper No. 43. 2. (*) Robert A. Miller and H. Seig (1997). “Accounting for Differences in Preferences and Technologies Across Countries Through Their Impact on Household Behavior.” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 15, 237–253. 3. P. Arrau and R. Chumacero (1998). Tamano de la Fonos de Pensiones En Chile Y Su Desempeno Financiero,” Cuadernos de Economia 105, 205-235. 4. (*) U.K. Schittko and M. Muller (1999). “Policy Shocks in a Monetary Assetpricing Model with Endogenous Production,” Jahrbucher fur Nationalokonomie und Statistik 218, 147-167. 5. (*) K. Jacobs (1999). “Incomplete Markets and Security Prices: Evidence rom the Consumer Expenditure Survey,” Journal of Monetary Economics 43, 351376. 6. K. Jacobs (1999). “Incomplete Markets and Security Prices: Do Asset-Pricing Puzzles Result from Aggregation Problems?” Journal of Finance 54(1), 123-163. 7. (*) Danthine, J.P., and J.B. Donaldson (1999). “Non-falsified Expectations and General Equilibrium Asset Pricing: The Power of the Peso,” Economic Journal 109, 607-635. 8. Steve Ambler (1999). “International Macroeconomics References,” UQAM, Autumn. 9. (*) Lubos Pastor and Robert F Stambaugh (1999). “Costs of Equity Capital and Model Mispricing,” Journal of Finance 54 (1), 67121. 10. Ricard C. Barnett and Mun Ho (1999). “Inflation, Black Market Exchange Rates, and Economic Growth,” Presented at the Fourth Conference on Dynamics, Economic Growth and International Trade at Tilburg University, The Netherlands, June 9-10. 11. Craig Burnside (1999). “Discrete State-Space Methods for the Study of Dynamic Economies,” In Computational Methods for the Study of Dynamic Economies, R. Marimon and A. Scott (eds.), Oxford: Oxford University Press. 12. (*) Judd, K., F. Kabler, and K. Schmeidders (2000). “Computing Equilibria in Infinite-Horizon Finance Economies: The Case of One Asset,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 24, 1047-1078. 49 13. (*) Lence, S.H. (2000). “Using Consumption and Asset Return Data to Estimate Farmers’ Time Preferences and Risk Attitudes,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 82, 934-947. 14. (*) J.C. Ham and K. Jacobs (2000). “Testing for Full Insurance using Exogenous Information,” Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 18, 387-397. 15. Lars Ljundqvist and Thomas Sargent (2000). Recursive Macroeconomic Theory, MIT Press. 16. (*) B. LeBaron (2001). “Evolution and Time Horizons in an Agent-based Stock Market,” Macroeconomic Dynamics 5, 225-254. 17. (*) Ralph Chami, Thomas F. Cosimano, and Connie Fullenkamp (2001), “Capital Trading, Stock Trading, and the Inflation Tax on Equity,” Review of Economic Dynamics 4, 575-606. 18. (*) P. Sellin (2001). “Monetary Policy and the Stock Market: Theory and Empirical Evidence,” Journal of Economic Surveys 15(4), 491-541. 19. (*) Blake LeBaron (2001). “Empirical Regularities from Interacting Long- and Short-Memory Investors in an Agent-based Stock Market,” IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation 5(5), 442-455. 20. William A. Brock (2001). “Complexity-based Methods in Cycles and Growth: Any Potential Value-added?” In Cycles, Growth and Structural Change: Theories and Empirical Evidence, Lionello F. Punzo (ed.), Routledge. 21. William A. Brock,W. Davis Dechert (2001). Growth Theory, Nonlinear Dynamics, and Economic Modelling: Scientific Essays of William Allen Brock, Edward Elgar. 22. (*) P. Maitra (2001). “Is Consumption Smooth at the Cost of Volatile Leisure? An Investigation of Rural India,” Applied Economics, 33(6), 727-734. 23. (*) J. Peltola and K.C. Krapp (2001). “Recursive Preferences in Forest Management,” Forestry Science 47(4), 455-465. 24. (*) S.H. Lence (2001). “Farmland Prices in the Presence of Transaction Costs: A Cautionary Note,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 83(4), 985-992. 25. (*) Lence S.H. and Mishra A.K. (2003). “The Impacts of Different Farm Programs on Cash Rents,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 85(3), pp. 753-761. 26. E. Ba¸sc¸ı and I. Sa˘glam (2003). “On the Importance of Sequencing of Markets in Monetary Economies,” In Advances in Economic Design, M. Sertel and S. 50 Koray (eds.), Society for Economic Design International Conference, Berlin: Springer-Verlag. 27. Marcelo Bianco (2003). Financial Economics, Risk and Information, World Scientific Publishers. 28. Enrique Kawamura (2004). “Investors’ Distrust and the Marketing of New Financial Assets,” Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance 44(2), pp. 265-295. 29. (*) O.L. Calin, Y. Chen, T.F. Cosimano and A. Himonas (2005). “Solving Asset Pricing Models when the Price-Dividend Function is Analytic,” Econometrica 73 (3): 961-982. 30. Ochoa, J. Marcelo (2006). “An Interpretation of an Affine Term Structure Model for Chile,” Estudios de Economia, 33(2), 155-84. 31. (*) Per Krusell and Anthony A. Smith (2006). “Quantitative Macroeconomic Models with Heterogeneous Agents,” Advances in Economics and Econometrics: Theory and Applications, Ninth World Congress I(41), 298-304. 32. (*) J. Mukuddem-Petersen, M.A. Petersen, I.M. Schoeman and A.B. Tau (2007). “An Application of Stochastic Optimization Theory to Institutional Finance,” Applied Mathematical Sciences 1(28), pp. 1359 - 1385. 33. (*) J. Mukuddem-Petersen, M.A. Petersen, I.M. Schoeman, B.A. Tau (2008). “Dynamic Modelling of Bank Profits,” Applied Financial Economics Letters, 4(3), 157-161. 34. Michael Wickens (2008). Macroeconomics: A General Equilibrium Approach, Princeton University Press. 35. (*) C. H. Fouche, J. Mukuddem-Petersen, M. A. Petersen, and M. C. Senos (2008). “Bank Valuation and Its Connections with the Subprime Mortgage Crisis and Basel II Capital Accord,” Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society, Volume 2008, Article ID 740845. 36. (*) Veni Arakelian and Efthymios G. Tsionas (2008). “Bayesian Analysis of the Consumption CAPM,” Advances in Econometrics, Emerald Publishing Group, Volume: 23, 619 - 643. 37. (*) Sergio H. Lence (2009). “Joint Estimation of Risk Preferences and Technology: Flexible Utility or Futility?” American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 91(3), pp. 581-59. 38. (*) Petersen M. A.; Senosi M. C.; Mukuddem-Petersen J.; et al. (2009). “Did Bank Capital Regulation Exacerbate the Subprime Mortgage Crisis?” Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society Article Number: 742968 51 39. (*) J. Mukuddem-Petersen, M. Mulaudzi, M. Petersen, and I. Schoeman (2010). “Optimal mortgage loan securitization and the subprime crisis,” Optimization Letters 4, 97-115. 40. (*) Anwar Nasution (2011). “Pro-cyclicality of the Basel Capital Requirement Ratio and Its Impact on Banks Comments,” Asian Economic Papers 10, 37-41. 41. Ifrach, Bar, and Gabriel Y. Weintraub (2012). “A framework for dynamic oligopoly in concentrated industries,” Columbia Business School Research Paper 12/47. 42. Ifrach, Bar. Market Dynamics with Many Agents: Applications in Social Learning and Competition. Diss.Columbia University, 2012. 43. Chen, Yu, Thomas F. Cosimano, and Alex A. Himonas (2013). “On formulating and solving portfolio decision and asset pricing problems,” Handbook of Computational Economics 3: 161. 44. (*) Sobel, Matthew J. (2013). “Discounting axioms imply risk neutrality,” Annals of Operations Research 208.1: 417-432. 45. (*) Pancrazi, Roberto (2014). “How beneficial was the Great Moderation after all?,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 46: 73-90. 46. (*) Kim, H. Youn (2014). “International financial integration and risk sharing among countries: A production-based approach,” Journal of the Japanese and International Economies 31: 16-35. Working papers 1. William Brock (1996). “Asset Price Behavior in Complex Environments.” Department of Economics, University of Wisconsin. 2. Anders Johansson and Karl-Markus Moden (1997). “Investment Plans and Revisions and Share Price Volatility,” University of Gothenburg. 3. Ralph Chami, Thomas F. Cosimano, and Connel Fullenkamp (1999). “The Stock Market Channel of Monetary Policy,” IMF Working Paper 99/22. 4. Stephanie Adjemian, Jerome Glachant, and Charles Vellutini (2000). “Regional Convergence and Aggregate Growth,” EPEE, Centre D-Etude des Politiques Economiques de L’Universite D’Evry 99-09. 5. J. Vinals (2001). “Monetary Policy Issues in a Low Inflation Environment,” CEPR Discussion Paper No. 2945. 6. S. Nishiyama and Kent Smetters (2002). “Ricardian Equivalence with Incomplete Household Risk Sharing,” NBER W.P. 8851. 52 7. P. Gutierrez and C. Palmero (2003). “Monetary Causes of Real Fluctuations in a General Equilibrium Model with Bank Reserves,” University of Valladolid, Spain. 8. Y. Chen, T. Cosimano, and A. Himonas (2003). “By Force of Habit: An Exploration of Asset Pricing Models using Analytical Methods,” University of Notre Dame. 9. Romulo Chumacero (2003). “A Toolkit for Analyzing Alternative Policies in the Chilean Economy, ” Central Bank of Chile Working Papers No 241. 10. H. Youn Kim (2003). “International Financial Integration and Risk Sharing and the Cross-Country Consumption-Output Correlation Puzzle: A Productionbased Approach,” Western Kentucky University 11. M. Ochao (2006). “Interpreting and Affine Term Structure Model for Chile,” Central Bank of Chile Working Paper No. 380. 12. A. Acuna and C. Pinto (2007). “Chilean Stock Market Efficiency: A Dynamic Approach using Volatility Tests,” MPRA Paper No. 7387. 13. Roberto Pancrazi (2009). “Who Cares About The Great Moderation?”, Duke University. 14. Dimitris Voliotis (2009). “Money and Capital Pricing,” Lecture Notes EC 112: Advanced Macroeconomics II. 15. S. Nishiyama and Kent Smetters (2010). “Ricardian Equivalence under Asymmetric Information,” Pension Research Council Working Paper No. 2010-05 Syllabi 1. Department of Economics, Duke University, ECON 349, Financial Econometrics 1998, Prof. George Tauchen 2. Department of Economics, Tufts University, Econ 205 Macroeconomic Theory I 2000, Prof. M. Bianconi 3. Maestria en Economia, Universidad de San Andres, Macroeconomia Avanzada 2000, Dr. Enrique Kawamura 4. Departmento de Economia, Pontificia Universidade Catolica – PUC-RIO, ECO2155, Modelos Intemtemporais de Determinacao de Precos de Ativo e Testes Empiricos 2001, Prof. Marcio G.P. Garcia 5. Department of Economics, University of Wisconsin - Topics in Applied Econometrics - Applied Time Series, Yuichi Kitamura, 2001 53 6. Departamento de Economia, Universidad de Antiquoia, Macroeconomia Avanzada, Docente Dr. David Fernando Tobon Orozco 7. Guide to Graduate Studies, Financial Mathematics and Mathematical Finance, Department of Mathematics, Florida State University (Fall 2003) 8. Melbourne Business School McLennan Library Course Bibliographies, Financial Modelling, May 2004 9. Maestria en Economia, Universidad de San Andres, Economia Internacional Monetaria 2004, Dr. Enrique Kawamura 10. Fundacao Instituto de Pesquisas Economicas (FIPE), Economia de Setor Financeiro, 2004 11. University of Basel, Prof. Wolfgand Drobetz and Prof. Yvan Legviler, Advanced Asset Pricing 6548, 2004 12. M. Guillard, Economie Monetaire and Financiere, EPEE, Universite d’Evry 13. Stern School of Business, New York University, Advanced Topics in Macroeconomics: Market Frictions, Chris Edmond, 2008 14. Department of Economics, Queen Mary, University of London, Advanced Asset Pricing and Modelling, Giovanni Cespa, 2008-2009 15. National Technical University of Athens, Advanced Finance Theory, E. Tzavalis and L. Rompolis, 2009 16. Princeton University Press. Macroeconomic Theory: A Dynamic General Equilibrium Approach. Wickens, Michael, 2012 54 Dynamic Macroeconomic Analysis: Theory and Policy in General Equilibrium, with Jagjit Chada (ed.) and Charles Nolan (ed.), 2003, Cambridge University Press. 1. Chadha, J. and C. Nolan (2002). “A Long View of the UK Business Cycle,” National Institute Economic Review, 182(1), 72-89. 2. George W. Evans and Seppo Honkapohja (2003). “Friedman’s Money Supply Rule vs. Optimal Interest Rate Policy,” Scottish Journal of Political Economy 50(5), 550 - 566. 3. Chadha, Jagjit S. and Charles Nolan (2004). “Output, Inflation and the New Keynesian Phillips Curve,” International Review of Applied Economics, 18(3), 271-87. 4. Yang, Tracy and Lim, Jamus Jerome (2004). “Competitive Devaluations–Bitter Pill or Bad Medicine? The Case of Thailand,” ASEAN Economic Bulletin, 21(2), 213-33. 5. Jaeger, C. (2005). “A Long-term Model of The German Economy,” Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research Report 102. 6. Enrique G. Mendoza (2005). “Real Exchange Rate Volatility and the Price of Nontradable Goods in Economies Prone to Sudden Stops,” Economa 6(1), pp. 103-148. 7. Coutinho, Leonor (2005). “Fiscal Policy in the New Open Economy Macroeconomics and Prospects for Fiscal Policy Coordination,” Journal of Economic Surveys, 19(5), 789-822. 8. Matthew B. Canzoneri, Robert E. Cumby, Behzad T. Diba and Olena Mykhaylova (2006). “New Keynesian Explanations of Cyclical Movements in Aggregate Inflation and Regional Inflation Differentials,” Open Economies Review 17(1), 2755. 9. Martin, Philippe and Rey, Helene (2006). “Globalization and Emerging Markets: With or Without Crash?” American Economic Review, 96(5), 1631-51. 10. Sumru Altug, Fanny Demers, and Michel Demers (2007). “Political Risk and Irreversible Investment,” CES-ifo Economic Studies 53(3), pp. 430-465. 11. Kirsanova, Tatiana; Satchi, Mathan; Vines, David; and Simon Wren-Lewis (2007). “Optimal Fiscal Policy Rules in a Monetary Union,” Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 2007, 39(7), 1759-84. 12. Azar, Samih Antoine (2007). “A Duration-based Equity Premium,” Applied Financial Economics Letters, Nov. 55 13. F.S. Demers, M. Demers, and H. Schaller (2008). “Irreversibility and Costs of Adjustment,” International Finance and Financial Services, Nova Science Publishers 14. Sumru Altug, Fanny Demers, and Michel Demers (2009). “The Investment Tax Credit and Irreversible Investment,” Journal of Macroeconomics 15. Juha Tervala (2008). “Productive Government Spending, Welfare and Exchange Rate Dynamics,” Financial Theory and Practice 32 (2) pp. 97-114. 16. M.A. C ¸ enesiz and C. Pierdzioch (2009). “Labor-Market Search, Financial Market Integration, and the Fiscal Multiplier,” Review of International Economics. 17. T. Kirsanova, C. Leith, and S. Wren-Lewis (2009). “Monetary and Fiscal Policy Interaction: The Current Consensus Assignment in the Light of Recent Developments,” The Economic Journal 119(541), pp. F482-F496 18. Sun, Qi. (2010). Four essays in dynamic macroeconomics. Diss. University of St. Andrews. 19. Christiano, Lawrence J., Martin S. Eichenbaum, and Mathias Trabandt (2013). “Unemployment and business cycles,” No. w19265. National Bureau of Economic Research. Working papers 1. D.M. Arseneau and S.K. Chugh (2005). “Fiscal Shocks, Job Creation, and Countercyclical Labor Markups,” Federal Reserve Board. 2. Jagjit S. Chadha and Luisa Corrado (2007). “On the Determinacy of Monetary Policy Under Expectational Errors,” CDMA Working Paper No. 06/03. 3. Garey Ramey (2008). “Exogenous vs. Endogenous Separation,” University of California, San Diego. 4. Javier Bianchi (2009). “Overborrowing and Systemic Externalities in the Business Cycle,” Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Working Paper 2009/24. 56 Asset Pricing for Dynamic Economies, with Pamela Labadie, 2008, Cambridge University Press. 1. (*) J. Tin (2010). “Representative Economic Agent and Asset Demand Revisited,” Progress in Economic Research 15, 45-86 2. (*) B. Aktan; J. Wang; and S. Zikovic Sasa (2010). “Market Portfolio Impact on Textile, Wearing Apparel and Leather Industries in Turkey: Sharpe Diagonal Model Approach,” Actual Problems in Economics 104, 268-282 3. (*) Michael D. Gerst; Richard B. Howarth; and Mark E. Borsuk (2010).“Accounting for the risk of extreme outcomes in an integrated assessment of climate change,” Energy Policy 38, 4540-4548 4. (*) Ming Pu, Gang-Zhi Fan and Seow Eng Ong (2010). “Heterogeneous Agents and the Indifference Pricing of Property Index Linked Swaps,” The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics 5. Offermann, Bastian (2011). “The equity premium puzzle and habit formation,” Magisterarbeit, University of Vienna. Fakultt fr Wirtschaftswissenschaften 6. (*) Burkhard Heer and Alfred Maussner (2012). “Log-normal approximation of the equity premium in the production model,” Applied Economics Letters 19, 407-412 7. Semmler, Willi (2012). “Dynamic Portfolio Decisions with Time-Varying Asset Returns and Labor Income,” The Journal of Wealth Management 15.3: 50-62. 8. Chen, Yu, Thomas F. Cosimano, and Alex A. Himonas (2013). “On formulating and solving portfolio decision and asset pricing problems,” Handbook of Computational Economics 3: 161. 9. Huang, Jizheng, and Heng-fu Zou (2013). “Asset Pricing, Capital Structure and the Spirit of Capitalism in a Production Economy,” Annals of Economics and Finance 14.2: 367-384. 10. Shen, Jia, and Robert J. Elliott (2014). “General equilibrium pricing with multiple dividend streams and regime switching,” Quantitative Finance aheadof-print : 1-15. 11. Christopher Heiberger, Halvor Ruf (2014). “Applied Macroeconomic Analysis with Epstein Zin Utility,” Priority Programme 1578 ‘Financial Mark et Imperfections and Macroeconomic Performance’, German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinscha 12. Pablo Fernandez (2015). “CAPM: An Absurd Model,” University of Navarra IESE Business School 57 Syllabi 1. NYU Stern, Advanced Topics in Macroeconomics: Market Frictions, Chris Edmond, Spring 2008 2. The University of Hong Kong Faculty of Business and Economics, ECON6017 Financial Economics, Part I: Discrete Time Asset Pricing, Dr. Chun Xia, Fall 2012 3. Toulouse School of Economics, Macroeconomics IV, Asset Pricing in Macroeconomics, Roberto Pancrazi, Winter 2011 4. ICEF, Higher School of Economics Moscow, MSc Programme in Financial Economics, Winter - Spring 2012, Course Syllabus for Financial Economics I (Asset Pricing), Lecturer: Carsten Sprenger 58 Business Cycles: Fact, Fallacy and Fantasy, World Scientific Publishers, (2009), 1. (*) Altug, Sumru, Bilin Neyapti, and Mustafa Emin (2012). “Institutions and business cycles,” International Finance 15.3: 347-366. 2. Adamowicz, Elbieta, and Konrad Walczyk (2013). “Stylised Facts about Cyclical Fluctuations of Business Survey Data Part I,” Expectations and Forecasting: 123. 3. (*) Tastan, Huseyin (2013). “Real business cycles in emerging economies: Turkish case,” Economic Modelling 34: 106-113. 4. Adamowicz, Elzbieta, and Konrad Walczyk (2013).“Stylised Facts in Cyclical Fluctuations of Business Survey Data,” Prace i Materiaky Instytutu Rozwoju Gospodarczego/Szkoka Gkowna Handlowa 93: 123-142. 59