Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) for transition economies is tested using Panel Seemingly Unrelated Regressions Augmented Dickey-Fuller (SURADF) tests of Breuer et al. (2001) for the period of January 1995 to December 2008. Although the other panel-based unit-root tests are joint tests of a unit root for all members of the panel and are incapable of determining the mix of I(0) and I(1) series in the panel setting, the Panel SURADF tests test a separate unit-root null hypothesis for each individual panel member and therefore identify how many and which series in the panel are stationary processes. The PPP hypothesis is not confirmed for all the nine transition countries except Estonia and Romania when Breuer et al.'s Panel SURADF tests are cond...
In this paper, we apply a range of univariate unit root tests including the Lagrangian multiplier (L...
Abstract: We examine the evidence for Purchasing Power Parity using post Bretton Woods exchange rate...
Using panel data techniques, this paper xamines whether purchasing power parity (PPP) is empirically...
In this study, the panel Seemingly Unrelated Regressions Augmented Dickey-Fuller (SURADF) tests adva...
This study examines whether the long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) holds in transition economies...
In this study, the panel Seemingly Unrelated Regressions Augmented Dickey-Fuller (SURADF) tests adva...
Applying the new panel unit root test developed in this article, we can overcome the pitfalls of old...
This paper is aim to test the validity of the purchasing power parity hypothesis by analyzing the tr...
A common finding in the empirical literature on the validity of purchasing power parity (PPP) is tha...
This paper investigates the validity of purchasing power parity (PPP) for 25 OECD countries by using...
The empirical record on PPP tests for transition economies is far from being so opulent as it is for...
The empirical record on PPP tests for transition economies is far from being so opulent as it is for...
Romania and Russia) using monthly data over the 1995–2011 period. We apply a recently introduced pan...
This paper uses a recently suggested test for unit roots in panels of time series data (Maddala and ...
The paper investigates the validity of PPP by using 15 OECD countries data of monthly frequency from...
In this paper, we apply a range of univariate unit root tests including the Lagrangian multiplier (L...
Abstract: We examine the evidence for Purchasing Power Parity using post Bretton Woods exchange rate...
Using panel data techniques, this paper xamines whether purchasing power parity (PPP) is empirically...
In this study, the panel Seemingly Unrelated Regressions Augmented Dickey-Fuller (SURADF) tests adva...
This study examines whether the long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) holds in transition economies...
In this study, the panel Seemingly Unrelated Regressions Augmented Dickey-Fuller (SURADF) tests adva...
Applying the new panel unit root test developed in this article, we can overcome the pitfalls of old...
This paper is aim to test the validity of the purchasing power parity hypothesis by analyzing the tr...
A common finding in the empirical literature on the validity of purchasing power parity (PPP) is tha...
This paper investigates the validity of purchasing power parity (PPP) for 25 OECD countries by using...
The empirical record on PPP tests for transition economies is far from being so opulent as it is for...
The empirical record on PPP tests for transition economies is far from being so opulent as it is for...
Romania and Russia) using monthly data over the 1995–2011 period. We apply a recently introduced pan...
This paper uses a recently suggested test for unit roots in panels of time series data (Maddala and ...
The paper investigates the validity of PPP by using 15 OECD countries data of monthly frequency from...
In this paper, we apply a range of univariate unit root tests including the Lagrangian multiplier (L...
Abstract: We examine the evidence for Purchasing Power Parity using post Bretton Woods exchange rate...
Using panel data techniques, this paper xamines whether purchasing power parity (PPP) is empirically...