This article tests for hysteresis by applying panel data unit root tests to quarterly unemployment rates for Australian states and territories between 1982:2 and 2002:1. Panel tests proposed by Levin and Lin (1992) using ordinary least squares and O'Connell (1998) using feasible generalised least squares (which assume that under the alternative hypothesis of stationarity, all labour markets revert to the natural rate at the same speed) provide evidence in support of the natural rate hypothesis. However, the panel test proposed by Im, Pesaran and Shin (1997), which does not assume that all cross-sectional units converge towards the equilibrium value at the same speed under the alternative and is therefore less restrictive than the other two ...
This study tests the hysteresis hypothesis of unemployment in fourteen OECD countries by examining t...
This paper tests hysteresis effects in unemployment using panel data for 19 OECD countries covering ...
This paper tests hysteresis e¤ects in unemployment using panel data for Tran- sition Countries cove...
[[abstract]]This article simultaneously investigates the hysteresis hypothesis of unemployment and l...
Existing studies using standard unit-root tests generally cannot reject the null hypothesis of a uni...
This paper investigates if conclusions regarding labour market hysteresis differ depending on whethe...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
This paper applies the panel unit root test proposed by Im, Pesaran and Shin (1997) to test for unem...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
The focus of our study is on determining whether unemployment rates in 8 New Industrialized Economie...
Studies using standard unit-root tests generally cannot reject the hypothesis of a unit root in unem...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
In this study, we test the hysteresis hypothesis in unemployment for Taiwan's 21 regional data sets ...
Unemployment is one of the most important problems that all countries must overcome. As a result, it...
This study tests the hysteresis hypothesis of unemployment in fourteen OECD countries by examining t...
This paper tests hysteresis effects in unemployment using panel data for 19 OECD countries covering ...
This paper tests hysteresis e¤ects in unemployment using panel data for Tran- sition Countries cove...
[[abstract]]This article simultaneously investigates the hysteresis hypothesis of unemployment and l...
Existing studies using standard unit-root tests generally cannot reject the null hypothesis of a uni...
This paper investigates if conclusions regarding labour market hysteresis differ depending on whethe...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
This paper applies the panel unit root test proposed by Im, Pesaran and Shin (1997) to test for unem...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
The focus of our study is on determining whether unemployment rates in 8 New Industrialized Economie...
Studies using standard unit-root tests generally cannot reject the hypothesis of a unit root in unem...
Most studies that use classical unit-root tests in OECD countries support the unemployment hysteresi...
In this study, we test the hysteresis hypothesis in unemployment for Taiwan's 21 regional data sets ...
Unemployment is one of the most important problems that all countries must overcome. As a result, it...
This study tests the hysteresis hypothesis of unemployment in fourteen OECD countries by examining t...
This paper tests hysteresis effects in unemployment using panel data for 19 OECD countries covering ...
This paper tests hysteresis e¤ects in unemployment using panel data for Tran- sition Countries cove...