All Stories

  1. Australasia
  2. China's Economy
  3. Elites and Secret Handshakes Versus Metrics and Rule-Based Acclamation: A Comment on “Measuring the Unmeasurable”
  4. THE CHINESE ECONOMY, PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
  5. Who is responsible for climate change?
  6. Can genuine savings predict future well-being?
  7. Does Money Buy Me Love?
  8. A Note on Nonlinear Cointegration, Misspecification, and Bimodality
  9. Coercive journal self citations, impact factor, Journal Influence and Article Influence
  10. Not all estimators are born equal: The empirical properties of some estimators of long memory
  11. The dynamic adjustment of factor inputs and its policy implications for major wheat producing areas in China
  12. Capital Formation and Agricultural Growth in China
  13. Innovation, Entrepreneurship, Geography and Growth
  14. A Survey of the Innovation Surveys
  15. Innovation, Entrepreneurship, Geography and Growth
  16. The evolution of hog production and potential sources for future growth in China
  17. INNOVATION, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, GEOGRAPHY AND GROWTH
  18. A SURVEY OF THE INNOVATION SURVEYS
  19. PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS FOR CHINA'S DAIRY FARMS
  20. China’s Energy Economy
  21. Beyond The Hype
  22. The emergence and evolution of regional convergence clusters in China's energy markets
  23. Beyond The Hype
  24. Energy Reforms and Changing Prices
  25. Conclusions and Implications
  26. Introduction
  27. Data Description
  28. Methods and Estimation
  29. A Survey of the Literature
  30. Gradual Reforms and the Emergence of Energy Market
  31. Factor Substitution and the Demand for Energy
  32. China’s Energy Situation in the New Millennium
  33. Technological Change and the Decomposition of Energy Intensity
  34. Great Expectatrics: Great Papers, Great Journals, Great Econometrics
  35. How are journal impact, prestige and article influence related? An application to neuroscience
  36. Economics and History
  37. Clio and the Economist: Making Historians Count
  38. Cliometrics and Time Series Econometrics: Some Theory and Applications
  39. Are China's energy markets cointegrated?
  40. Long memory or shifting means in geophysical time series?
  41. GARCH dependence in extreme value models with Bayesian inference
  42. CONTRIBUTIONS ON TIME SERIES ECONOMETRICS
  43. EDITORIAL
  44. CLIOMETRICS AND TIME SERIES ECONOMETRICS: SOME THEORY AND APPLICATIONS
  45. PHYSICAL STATURE IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY NEW ZEALAND: A PRELIMINARY INTERPRETATION
  46. CLIO AND THE ECONOMIST: MAKING HISTORIANS COUNT
  47. WHAT MAKES A GREAT JOURNAL GREAT IN ECONOMICS? THE SINGER NOT THE SONG
  48. TEN THINGS WE SHOULD KNOW ABOUT TIME SERIES
  49. Knowledge, natural resource abundance and economic development: Lessons from New Zealand 1861–1939
  50. The integration of major fuel source markets in China: Evidence from panel cointegration tests
  51. China's energy economy: A survey of the literature
  52. Extreme value modelling for forecasting market crisis impacts
  53. A survey of China's renewable energy economy
  54. Modeling China's energy consumption behavior and changes in energy intensity
  55. Gradual reforms and the emergence of energy market in China: Evidence from tests for convergence of energy prices
  56. China's energy situation in the new millennium
  57. Contours of the World Economy, 1-2030AD: Essays in Macro-Economic History
  58. Substitution possibilities and determinants of energy intensity for China
  59. The pastoral boom, the rural land market, and long swings in New Zealand economic growth, 1873-19391
  60. Constructing structural VAR models with conditional independence graphs
  61. Industrial agglomeration, geographic innovation and total factor productivity: The case of Taiwan
  62. China's energy economy: Technical change, factor demand and interfactor/interfuel substitution
  63. Resolving the productivity paradox
  64. Money and inflation in a nonlinear model
  65. Patenting, intellectual property rights and sectoral outputs in Industrial Revolution Britain, 1780–1851
  66. Economics on the edge of chaos: Some pitfalls of linearizing complex systems
  67. Convergence in Productivity Across Industries: Some Results for New Zealand and Australia
  68. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND ECONOMIC INCENTIVES
  69. A FORWARD-LOOKING MEASURE OF THE STOCK OF HUMAN CAPITAL IN NEW ZEALAND*
  70. BEYOND THE HYPE: INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND THE KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY/KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY
  71. The Ten Commandments for Academics
  72. Reducing carbon emissions? The relative effectiveness of different types of environmental tax: the case of New Zealand
  73. Modelling innovative activity in the New Zealand biotechnology sector
  74. Measuring the stock of human capital in New Zealand
  75. REFRIGERATION AND DISTRIBUTION: NEW ZEALAND LAND PRICES AND REAL WAGES 1873-1939
  76. Modelling the causal relationship between energy consumption and GDP in New Zealand, Australia, India, Indonesia, The Philippines and Thailand
  77. Globalization and real wages in New Zealand 1873–1913
  78. Modelling the demand for money in New Zealand
  79. Economic Growth in Transition
  80. Cost- and Income-based Measures of Human Capital
  81. Modeling and Forecasting the Demand for Electricity in New Zealand: A Comparison of Alternative Approaches
  82. MALCOLM. The Theory and Practice of Cointegration Analysis in RATS
  83. Regime shift and fast recovery on the periphery: New Zealand in the 1930s
  84. Making and Breaking Rules in Applied Econometrics
  85. The Econometrics of Financial Time Series
  86. New Zealand economic growth—endogenous or exogenous?
  87. The Ten Commandments for Presenting a Conference Paper
  88. Earthquakes and Volcanoes: The International Conference on Modelling and Forecasting Financial Volatility, Perth Australia, 7-9 September 2001
  89. Hawai’i Conference on Business or Hawai’i Conference Business?
  90. 2001 Econometric Society Australasian Meeting: Auckland, 6–8 th July
  91. The Ten Commandments for Attending a Conference
  92. The New Zealand Association of Economists Conference (NZAE): 27–29 th June 2001
  93. Economic modelling for trout management: an introduction and case study
  94. Testing models of growth - a two-sector model of the USA
  95. Income Uncertainty and Consumer Spending during the Great Depression
  96. MEASURING NEW ZEALAND'S GDP 1865-1933: A COINTEGRATION-BASED APPROACH
  97. Real Wages in Australia and Canada, 1870-1913: Globalization versus Productivity
  98. Outside the Club: New Zealand's economic growth, 1870-1993
  99. MEETING OF THE NEW ZEALAND ECONOMETRIC STUDY GROUP (NZESG)
  100. British Industrialization, 1815–1860: A Disaggregate Time-Series Perspective
  101. Robustness and Local Linearisation in Economic Models
  102. Growing Apart?Australia and New Zealand growth experiences, 1870–1993
  103. Non-linear noise reduction and detecting chaos: some evidence from the S&P Composite Price Index
  104. International evidence on shock persistence: structural change, nonlinearities and subsample robustness
  105. A Nordic convergence club?
  106. Editorial
  107. Cointegration in Practice
  108. Editorial
  109. Vector autoregression, cointegration and causality: testing for causes of the British industrial revolution
  110. Software Reviews
  111. A Tale of Two Dominions: Comparing the Macroeconomic Records of Australia and Canada Since 1870
  112. Comparing British and American Economic and Industrial Performance 1860–1993: A Time Series Perspective
  113. The Winter of my Content: The Econometric Society Australasian Meeting 1997, Melbourne, Australia
  114. Shock Persistence and Structural Change
  115. Endogenous Growth or “Big Bang”: Two views of the First Industrial Revolution
  116. Endogenous Growth, Trend Output, and the Industrial Revolution: Reply to Crafts and Mills
  117. Time-series based tests of the convergence hypothesis: Some positive results
  118. The Royal Economic Society Conference 1997 - Staffordshire University
  119. Segmenting the contours: Australian economic growth 1828–1913
  120. Econometric Society Australasian Meeting, ESAM96, Perth, Australia
  121. Unit Roots and British Industrial Growth, 1923-92
  122. Convergence in GDP per capita and real wages: Some results for Australia and the UK
  123. TECHNOLOGICAL EPOCHS AND BRITISH INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION, 1700–1992
  124. INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MODELLING AND SIMULATION, NEWCASTLE, NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA 1995
  125. Book Review: Cointegration analysis in econometric modelling, R.I.D. Harris, Harvester, Wheatsheaf, London,1995, ISBN 0-13-35582-4, pp. ix+176, £15.95
  126. EXPLAINING THE UNITED STATES' INDUSTRIAL GROWTH, 1860?1991: ENDOGENOUS VERSUS EXOGENOUS MODELS
  127. Modelling the supply of fishing effort
  128. A Time-Series Perspective on Convergence: Australia, UK and USA since 1870
  129. Balanced versus Compromise Estimates of UK GDP 1870-1913
  130. COINTEGRATION, CAUSALITY AND WAGNER'S LAW: A TEST FOR BRITAIN 1870–1913
  131. Linear saddlepoint dynamics ‘on their head’. the scientific content of the new orthodoxy in macrodynamics
  132. INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MODELLING AND SIMULATION, PERTH, AUSTRALIA 1993
  133. Structural change and unit root testing: British industrial production 1700-1913
  134. MICROFIT 3.0. An Interactive Econometric Software Package.
  135. ECONOMETRIC ISSUES IN MACROECONOMIC MODELS WITH GENERATED REGRESSORS
  136. Cointegration, causality and export-led growth in Portugal, 1865–1985
  137. ECONOMETRIC SOCIETY, EUROPEAN MEETING (ESEM) 1991?CAMBRIDGE
  138. FIXED MONEY GROWTH RULES AND THE RATE OF INFLATION: GLOBAL VERSUS LOCAL DYNAMICS
  139. PC-READY RECKONER
  140. AUSTRALASIAN MEETING OF THE ECONOMETRIC SOCIETY, 1989
  141. AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC CONGRESS 1988
  142. ECONOMETRIC SOCIETY AUSTRALASIAN MEETING 1987
  143. European Economic Association: First Annual Congress
  144. Testing for Energy Market Integration in China
  145. China's Energy Situation and its Implications in the New Millennium
  146. Innovation in New Zealand: issues of firm size, local market size and economic geography