International audienceThis study tests for the long-run purchasing power parity hypothesis for a panel of 17 African economies, all belonging to the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, over the period 1970–2007. This assumption is considered both in its traditional view, that is, the reversion of the real exchange rate (RER) to a constant mean, and in the Balassa-Samuelson view, that is, the reversion of the RER to a constant trend. For this purpose, we use the new panel data stationary test advocated by Carrion-i-Silvestre et al. that accounts for multiple structural breaks and cross-sectional dependence. Finally, our results give strong evidence for purchasing power parity when the Balassa-Samuelson version is considered. This ...
[[abstract]]This study applies nonlinear cointegration to assess exchange rates with the correspondi...
This paper examines the validity of the purchasing power parity, PPP for six African countries of Bo...
We examine the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) hypothesis using a unique panel of monthly data on blac...
International audienceThis study tests for the long-run purchasing power parity hypothesis for a pan...
Abstract. The panel data stationary test with multiple structural breaks developed by Carrion-i-Silv...
This study reexamines the validity of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) hypothesis using a batt...
This paper addresses whether parallel market exchange rates in Africa behave in the long run in a ma...
This paper tests for the purchasing power parity condition in selected developing countries in Afric...
The paper tests whether the theory of Purchasing Power Parity holds in a selected sample of twenty A...
This paper investigates the possibility that the adjustment towards long-run relative purchasing pow...
Purchasing power parity is re-examined using a new data set containing long time span data for thirt...
This paper investigates the long-run dynamics of black and official exchange rates for ten African c...
This paper re-examines the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) hypothesis in which the endogenously determ...
This paper examines the empirical validity of Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) for certain large develo...
[[abstract]]This study applies non-linear threshold unit-root test to assess the non-stationary prop...
[[abstract]]This study applies nonlinear cointegration to assess exchange rates with the correspondi...
This paper examines the validity of the purchasing power parity, PPP for six African countries of Bo...
We examine the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) hypothesis using a unique panel of monthly data on blac...
International audienceThis study tests for the long-run purchasing power parity hypothesis for a pan...
Abstract. The panel data stationary test with multiple structural breaks developed by Carrion-i-Silv...
This study reexamines the validity of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP) hypothesis using a batt...
This paper addresses whether parallel market exchange rates in Africa behave in the long run in a ma...
This paper tests for the purchasing power parity condition in selected developing countries in Afric...
The paper tests whether the theory of Purchasing Power Parity holds in a selected sample of twenty A...
This paper investigates the possibility that the adjustment towards long-run relative purchasing pow...
Purchasing power parity is re-examined using a new data set containing long time span data for thirt...
This paper investigates the long-run dynamics of black and official exchange rates for ten African c...
This paper re-examines the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) hypothesis in which the endogenously determ...
This paper examines the empirical validity of Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) for certain large develo...
[[abstract]]This study applies non-linear threshold unit-root test to assess the non-stationary prop...
[[abstract]]This study applies nonlinear cointegration to assess exchange rates with the correspondi...
This paper examines the validity of the purchasing power parity, PPP for six African countries of Bo...
We examine the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) hypothesis using a unique panel of monthly data on blac...