This paper examines several grounds for doubting the value of much of the special attention recently devoted to unit root econometrics. Unit root hypotheses are less well connected to economic theory than is often suggested or assumed; distribution theory for tests of other hypotheses in models containing unit roots are less often affected by the presence of unit roots than has been widely recognized; and the Bayesian inferential theory for dynamic models is largely unaffected by the presence of unit roots. The paper displays an example to show that when Bayesian probability statements and classical marginal significance levels diverge as they do for unit root models, the marginal significance levels are misleading. The paper shows how to c...
We propose a posterior odds analysis in order to compare a random walk model with a first-order stat...
We propose a posterior odds analysis of the hypothesis of a unit root in real exchange rates. From a...
textabstractWe propose a posterior odds analysis of the hypothesis of a unit root in real exchange r...
This paper has two themes. First, we classify some effects which outliers in the data have on unit r...
For a Bayesian approach to be useful, the priors and posteriors must be carefully interpreted to gua...
textabstractThis paper is a comment on P. C. B. Phillips, `To criticise the critics: an objective Ba...
Some researchers, for example, Koop (1992), and Sims (1988), advocated for Bayesian alternatives to ...
In this paper we want to shed some more light on an old debate about classical and Bayesian unit roo...
Some researchers, for example, Koop (1992), and Sims (1988), advocated for Bayesian alternatives to ...
This paper develops a formal decision theoretic approach to testing for a unit root in economic time...
This article uses a Bayesian unit-root test in stochastic volatility models. The time series of inte...
Abstract: Some researchers, for example, Koop [1], and Sims [2], have advocated for Bayesian alterna...
The unit root problem plays a central role in empirical applications in the time series econometric ...
Some researchers, for example, Koop (1992), and Sims (1988), advocated for Bayesian alternatives to ...
We propose a posterior odds analysis in order to compare a random walk model with a first-order stat...
We propose a posterior odds analysis of the hypothesis of a unit root in real exchange rates. From a...
textabstractWe propose a posterior odds analysis of the hypothesis of a unit root in real exchange r...
This paper has two themes. First, we classify some effects which outliers in the data have on unit r...
For a Bayesian approach to be useful, the priors and posteriors must be carefully interpreted to gua...
textabstractThis paper is a comment on P. C. B. Phillips, `To criticise the critics: an objective Ba...
Some researchers, for example, Koop (1992), and Sims (1988), advocated for Bayesian alternatives to ...
In this paper we want to shed some more light on an old debate about classical and Bayesian unit roo...
Some researchers, for example, Koop (1992), and Sims (1988), advocated for Bayesian alternatives to ...
This paper develops a formal decision theoretic approach to testing for a unit root in economic time...
This article uses a Bayesian unit-root test in stochastic volatility models. The time series of inte...
Abstract: Some researchers, for example, Koop [1], and Sims [2], have advocated for Bayesian alterna...
The unit root problem plays a central role in empirical applications in the time series econometric ...
Some researchers, for example, Koop (1992), and Sims (1988), advocated for Bayesian alternatives to ...
We propose a posterior odds analysis in order to compare a random walk model with a first-order stat...
We propose a posterior odds analysis of the hypothesis of a unit root in real exchange rates. From a...
textabstractWe propose a posterior odds analysis of the hypothesis of a unit root in real exchange r...