It is a well-established fact in the literature on simulating Input-Output tables that mechanical methods for estimating intermediate trade lead to biased results where cross-hauling is underestimated and Type-I multipliers are overstated. Repeated findings to this effect have led to a primary emphasis on advocating the accurate estimation of intermediate trade flows. This paper reviews previous research and argues for a qualification of the consensus view: When simulating IO tables, construction approaches need to consider spill-over effects driven by wage and consumption flows. In particular, for the case of metropolitan economies, wage and consumption flows are important if accurate Type-II multipliers are to be obtained. This is demonst...
This paper shows how to adapt recent methodological advances to derive a shipment based interregion...
The measurement of inter-connectedness in an economy using inputoutput tables is not new, however mu...
Intermediate goods are another produced factor of production, like capital. Simple examples suggest ...
It is a well-established fact in the literature on simulating Input-Output tables that mechanical me...
This article examines the effectiveness of a new non-survey regionalization method: Kronenberg's Cro...
HARRIS R. I. D. and LIU A. (1998) Input-output modelling of the urban and regional economy: the impo...
154 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.This dissertation presented a...
We show that “home bias” in trade patterns will arise endogenously due to the co-location decisions ...
The paper examines the relative importance for industrial location of production linkages and knowle...
In an input-output context the impact of any particular industrial sector is commonly measured in te...
The methodology in many studies involving input-output analysis appears to be often misunderstood, p...
Input-output models are often used in regional science due to their versatility and their ability to...
Backward linkages are usually measured using output multipliers as based on the input matrix. Simila...
For a long time, the use of intermediate products in production has been growing more rapidly in mos...
Backward linkages are usually measured using output multipliers as based on the input matrix. Simila...
This paper shows how to adapt recent methodological advances to derive a shipment based interregion...
The measurement of inter-connectedness in an economy using inputoutput tables is not new, however mu...
Intermediate goods are another produced factor of production, like capital. Simple examples suggest ...
It is a well-established fact in the literature on simulating Input-Output tables that mechanical me...
This article examines the effectiveness of a new non-survey regionalization method: Kronenberg's Cro...
HARRIS R. I. D. and LIU A. (1998) Input-output modelling of the urban and regional economy: the impo...
154 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993.This dissertation presented a...
We show that “home bias” in trade patterns will arise endogenously due to the co-location decisions ...
The paper examines the relative importance for industrial location of production linkages and knowle...
In an input-output context the impact of any particular industrial sector is commonly measured in te...
The methodology in many studies involving input-output analysis appears to be often misunderstood, p...
Input-output models are often used in regional science due to their versatility and their ability to...
Backward linkages are usually measured using output multipliers as based on the input matrix. Simila...
For a long time, the use of intermediate products in production has been growing more rapidly in mos...
Backward linkages are usually measured using output multipliers as based on the input matrix. Simila...
This paper shows how to adapt recent methodological advances to derive a shipment based interregion...
The measurement of inter-connectedness in an economy using inputoutput tables is not new, however mu...
Intermediate goods are another produced factor of production, like capital. Simple examples suggest ...