There has been a recent resurgence of interest in biproportional adjustment methods for updating and interpreting change in matrix representations of regional structures, most commonly input-output accounts. Although the biproportional method, commonly called the RAS technique in the input-output literature, has been shown to have a number of theoretically appealing properties, various alternatives do exist. In this paper, we develop and empirically assess a number of alternatives, comparing performance and examining the attributes of these adjustment methods. Two of these are sign-preserving updating methods for use when tables contain both positive and negative entries. One of these is shown to generate less information gain than does a g...
The RAS method is used to update or regionalize a single matrix such that it conforms to new row and...
Abstract. Some issues raised by Thumann in response to an earlier article by Hewings are addressed i...
Abstract. Some issues raised by Thumann in response to an earlier article by Hewings are addressed i...
There has been a recent resurgence of interest in biproportional adjustment methods for updating and...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
International audienceThis paper introduces the rest of this issue of Economic Systems Research, whi...
International audienceThis paper introduces the rest of this issue of Economic Systems Research, whi...
International audienceThis paper introduces the rest of this issue of Economic Systems Research, whi...
A Normally, when updating or regionalizing input–output matrices with nega-tive entries, the negati...
The RAS method is used to update or regionalize a single matrix such that it conforms to new row and...
The RAS method is used to update or regionalize a single matrix such that it conforms to new row and...
The RAS method is used to update or regionalize a single matrix such that it conforms to new row and...
Abstract. Some issues raised by Thumann in response to an earlier article by Hewings are addressed i...
Abstract. Some issues raised by Thumann in response to an earlier article by Hewings are addressed i...
There has been a recent resurgence of interest in biproportional adjustment methods for updating and...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
The biproportional RAS technique has become one of the most important tools to update, regionalize, ...
International audienceThis paper introduces the rest of this issue of Economic Systems Research, whi...
International audienceThis paper introduces the rest of this issue of Economic Systems Research, whi...
International audienceThis paper introduces the rest of this issue of Economic Systems Research, whi...
A Normally, when updating or regionalizing input–output matrices with nega-tive entries, the negati...
The RAS method is used to update or regionalize a single matrix such that it conforms to new row and...
The RAS method is used to update or regionalize a single matrix such that it conforms to new row and...
The RAS method is used to update or regionalize a single matrix such that it conforms to new row and...
Abstract. Some issues raised by Thumann in response to an earlier article by Hewings are addressed i...
Abstract. Some issues raised by Thumann in response to an earlier article by Hewings are addressed i...