Based on US state-level data for the period 1982-2016, two reduced-form versions of New Keynesian wage Phillips curves are examined. These are based on either sticky nominal wages or real-wage rigidity. The endogeneity of unemployment is taken into account by instrumentation and the use of common correlated effects (CCE) and mean group (MG) methods. This is the first time that this methodology has been applied in this context. These are important issues, as ignoring them may lead to substantial biases. The results show that while the aggregate data do not provide estimates that are consistent with either of the theoretical models examined, the panel methods do. Moreover, use of an appropriate MG CCE estimator leads to economically signific...
This paper explains and shows us the Phillips Curve for advanced economies on period 1996-2007 for s...
The debate over the Phillips Curve - as the relation between level of unemployment rate and inflatio...
This paper documents a statistical regulatity or law. It shows that there exists a downward-sloping ...
Two reduced-form versions of New Keynesian wage Phillips curves based on either sticky nominal wages...
This paper tests the reduced form New Keynesian Wage Phillips Curve in several advanced countries fo...
This study demonstrates that a model with efficiency wages and imperfect information produces a Phil...
This paper criticises the use of partial equilibrium analysis in new Keynesian explanations of wage ...
We use a three-regime threshold regression model to assess the ability of the New Keynesian Wage Phi...
This paper demonstrates of how the labor and product markets interact in determining the outcome of ...
Our purpose is to examine the broad consistency of the data with the stylized predictions ofa simple...
We derive the backward-looking Keynesian wage-price spiral from micro-foundations. The optimal price...
Using panel data on U.S. MSAs, this paper estimates how a typical MSA\u27s wages of different demogr...
Following Phillip's original work on the UK, applied research on unemployment and wages has been dom...
In an economy with increasing returns to scale in production, wage changes and unemployment levels a...
This project estimates the Phillips curve using disaggregated US data. The panel model for this proj...
This paper explains and shows us the Phillips Curve for advanced economies on period 1996-2007 for s...
The debate over the Phillips Curve - as the relation between level of unemployment rate and inflatio...
This paper documents a statistical regulatity or law. It shows that there exists a downward-sloping ...
Two reduced-form versions of New Keynesian wage Phillips curves based on either sticky nominal wages...
This paper tests the reduced form New Keynesian Wage Phillips Curve in several advanced countries fo...
This study demonstrates that a model with efficiency wages and imperfect information produces a Phil...
This paper criticises the use of partial equilibrium analysis in new Keynesian explanations of wage ...
We use a three-regime threshold regression model to assess the ability of the New Keynesian Wage Phi...
This paper demonstrates of how the labor and product markets interact in determining the outcome of ...
Our purpose is to examine the broad consistency of the data with the stylized predictions ofa simple...
We derive the backward-looking Keynesian wage-price spiral from micro-foundations. The optimal price...
Using panel data on U.S. MSAs, this paper estimates how a typical MSA\u27s wages of different demogr...
Following Phillip's original work on the UK, applied research on unemployment and wages has been dom...
In an economy with increasing returns to scale in production, wage changes and unemployment levels a...
This project estimates the Phillips curve using disaggregated US data. The panel model for this proj...
This paper explains and shows us the Phillips Curve for advanced economies on period 1996-2007 for s...
The debate over the Phillips Curve - as the relation between level of unemployment rate and inflatio...
This paper documents a statistical regulatity or law. It shows that there exists a downward-sloping ...