1991
DOI: 10.3386/w3812
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Co-Integration, Aggregate Consumption, and the Demand For Imports: A Structural Econometric Investigation

Abstract: Washington for their corrunent and suggestions. All remaining confusions are my doing. This paper is part of NB€R's research program in International Studies. Any opinions expressed are those of the author and not those of the National Bureau of Economic Research.

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Cited by 48 publications
(70 citation statements)
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“…A study on the US import demand by [21] estimated a long-run equilibrium relationship between imported consumer goods, relative price of imports and consumption of domestically produced goods. The study found that all these variables are cointegrated.…”
Section: Empirical Literature and Methods For Estimation Of Import Dementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A study on the US import demand by [21] estimated a long-run equilibrium relationship between imported consumer goods, relative price of imports and consumption of domestically produced goods. The study found that all these variables are cointegrated.…”
Section: Empirical Literature and Methods For Estimation Of Import Dementioning
confidence: 99%
“…to Mankiw and Summers (1986), who argue for the superiority of consumption to GNP as the scale variable in the money demand function. In addition, it also shows that, as suggested by Goldfeld and Sichel (1990), Clarida (1994), and Guidotti(1993, the disaggregation of the scale variable to reflect the nature of international transactions in an open economy is essential.…”
Section: The Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Esto se puede apreciar en los estudios a nivel internacional de Houthakker y Magee (1969), Thursby y Thursby (1984), Márquez y McNeilly (1988), Rose (1991), Clarida (1994), Reinhart (1995), Senhadji (1997), Senhadji y Montenegro (1998), Fullerton y Sprinkle (2005), y Bahmani-Oskooee y Kara (2005).…”
Section: Revisión De Literaturaunclassified
“…A partir de Rose (1991), Clarida (1994) y Reinhart (1995 se señala la necesidad de investigar las propiedades de las series de tiempo involucradas en la estimación de las ecuaciones de importaciones o exportaciones de un país basadas en el modelo de sustitutos imperfectos. Estos autores encuentran que las variables involucradas en la estimación de las ecuaciones de comercio, ya sea de países en desarrollo o desarrollados, pueden ser caracterizadas como procesos I(1), lo que podría llevar al conocido problema de regresión espuria señalado en Granger y Newbold (1974).…”
Section: Revisión De Literaturaunclassified