Despite a plethora of studies on purchasing power parity (PPP), those that take a cointegration approach have found mixed evidence on PPP. The goal of this article is to obviate existing tensions in the PPP literature by using a simple test for cointegration between nominal exchange rate and relative prices that accounts for multiple structural breaks. We find that for 14 out of 15 OECD countries, there is evidence of a cointegration relationship between nominal exchange rate and relative prices at the 5% level. Only for Japan, we find evidence for cointegration at the 2.5% level. These results suggest overwhelming evidence of support for PPP for the OECD countries
This paper examines the long-run validity of purchasing power parity (PPP) for fourteen developing c...
This paper investigates relative purchasing power parity for a sample of nine Asian economies during...
This paper applies the recently developed maximum-likelihood-panel cointegration method of Larsson a...
Despite a plethora of studies on purchasing power parity (PPP), those that take a cointegration appr...
Cointegration analysis is often used in empirical studies of Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) to test w...
PPP (purchasing power parity) explaining the longrun behaviour of nominal exchange rates is one of t...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of panel unit root and panel cointegration tests of long-r...
We present an empirical analysis of a long run Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) for thirteen Asia-Pacif...
The paper empirically examines the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) hypothesis using cointegration and ...
There is a large literature that investigates whether or not real exchange rates are stationary in a...
This paper tests the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) theory in a partial equilibrium framework. Statis...
The finding of nonlinear cointegration between Asian exchange rates with the corresponding relative ...
This article uses the most recent tests available to carry out a detailed empirical analysis of the ...
In this study, we search for evidence of empirical validity of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP...
We examine long-run PPP between Germany, Great Britain, Japan and the United States over the period ...
This paper examines the long-run validity of purchasing power parity (PPP) for fourteen developing c...
This paper investigates relative purchasing power parity for a sample of nine Asian economies during...
This paper applies the recently developed maximum-likelihood-panel cointegration method of Larsson a...
Despite a plethora of studies on purchasing power parity (PPP), those that take a cointegration appr...
Cointegration analysis is often used in empirical studies of Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) to test w...
PPP (purchasing power parity) explaining the longrun behaviour of nominal exchange rates is one of t...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of panel unit root and panel cointegration tests of long-r...
We present an empirical analysis of a long run Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) for thirteen Asia-Pacif...
The paper empirically examines the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) hypothesis using cointegration and ...
There is a large literature that investigates whether or not real exchange rates are stationary in a...
This paper tests the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) theory in a partial equilibrium framework. Statis...
The finding of nonlinear cointegration between Asian exchange rates with the corresponding relative ...
This article uses the most recent tests available to carry out a detailed empirical analysis of the ...
In this study, we search for evidence of empirical validity of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP...
We examine long-run PPP between Germany, Great Britain, Japan and the United States over the period ...
This paper examines the long-run validity of purchasing power parity (PPP) for fourteen developing c...
This paper investigates relative purchasing power parity for a sample of nine Asian economies during...
This paper applies the recently developed maximum-likelihood-panel cointegration method of Larsson a...