Summary This paper presents an investigation of the unit root hypothesis for per capita real GDP series in 46 African countries from Maddison (2003) over the period spreading during 1950 and 2001. Toward this end, we employ highly flexible panel techniques which incorporate multiple mean and slope shifts in the output series. Our findings are clearly supportive of regime-wise trend stationarity in output after (1) allowing for cross-dependence and multiple breaks, and (2) removing four countries that exert undue influence on the whole panel. Remarkably, our main results hold true for alternative per capita real GDP proxies retrieved from the Penn World Table 6.2 as well as for different country-groups constructed on the basis of the country...
Motivated by the absence of conclusive guidance from the current literature, this study revisits the...
In this note we present the outcomes of two unit root tests, which allow for the existence of a brea...
In this paper we investigate whether long run time series of income per capita are better described ...
[[abstract]]In this study we use a more powerful nonlinear (logistic) unit root test advanced by Ley...
[[abstract]]This note uses the newly developed panel SURADF tests advanced by Breuer et al . (2001) ...
This note uses the newly developed panel SURADF tests advanced by Breuer et al. (2001) to investigat...
In this study we use a more powerful nonlinear (logistic) unit root test advanced by Leybourne et al...
This paper extends the applied time series literature in economic development, by testing whether th...
This article examines whether the consumption-income ratio is stationary in 50 African countries. We...
This paper uses a tri-variate structural VAR with a long-run identification scheme, akin to the Blan...
The growth of an economy is determined largely by the growth of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ove...
International audienceThis study tests for the long-run purchasing power parity hypothesis for a pan...
International audienceThis article examines the absolute and conditional convergence of real GDP per...
This paper examines the validity of the purchasing power parity, PPP for six African countries of Bo...
This paper examines the role of external shocks in explaining macroeconomic fluctuations in African ...
Motivated by the absence of conclusive guidance from the current literature, this study revisits the...
In this note we present the outcomes of two unit root tests, which allow for the existence of a brea...
In this paper we investigate whether long run time series of income per capita are better described ...
[[abstract]]In this study we use a more powerful nonlinear (logistic) unit root test advanced by Ley...
[[abstract]]This note uses the newly developed panel SURADF tests advanced by Breuer et al . (2001) ...
This note uses the newly developed panel SURADF tests advanced by Breuer et al. (2001) to investigat...
In this study we use a more powerful nonlinear (logistic) unit root test advanced by Leybourne et al...
This paper extends the applied time series literature in economic development, by testing whether th...
This article examines whether the consumption-income ratio is stationary in 50 African countries. We...
This paper uses a tri-variate structural VAR with a long-run identification scheme, akin to the Blan...
The growth of an economy is determined largely by the growth of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ove...
International audienceThis study tests for the long-run purchasing power parity hypothesis for a pan...
International audienceThis article examines the absolute and conditional convergence of real GDP per...
This paper examines the validity of the purchasing power parity, PPP for six African countries of Bo...
This paper examines the role of external shocks in explaining macroeconomic fluctuations in African ...
Motivated by the absence of conclusive guidance from the current literature, this study revisits the...
In this note we present the outcomes of two unit root tests, which allow for the existence of a brea...
In this paper we investigate whether long run time series of income per capita are better described ...