Items where Division is "Faculty of Social Sciences > Economics, Department of " and Year is 1992
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Bailey, RE and Boyer, G and Hatton, T (1992) The Union Wage Effect in Late Nineteenth Century Britain. UNSPECIFIED. CEPR Discussion Papers.
Chambers, Marcus J (1992) Estimation of a continuousâtime dynamic demand system. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 7 (1). pp. 53-64. DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/jae.3950070106
Frankel, J and Erwin, S and Rockett, K (1992) A Note on Internationally Coordinated Policy Packages Intended to be Robust Under Model Uncertainty. UNSPECIFIED. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Papers 3747.
Frankel, Jeffrey A and Erwin, Scott and Rockett, Katharine (1992) International Macroeconomic Policy Coordination When Policymakers Do Not Agree on the True Model: Reply. American Economic Review, 82 (4). pp. 1052-56.
Hatton, T and Williamson, JG (1992) International Migration and World Development: A Historical Perspective. UNSPECIFIED. National Bureau of Economic Research Historical Working Papers.
Hatton, T and Williamson, JG (1992) What Drove the Mass Migrations from Europe in the Late Ninteenth Century. UNSPECIFIED. Harvard Institute of Economic Research Working Papers.
Hatton, Tim and Williamson, Jeffrey G (1992) After the Famine: Emigration from Ireland 1850-1913. Working Paper. Harvard Institute of Economic Research Working Papers.
Hatton, Timothy J and Williamson, Jeffrey G (1992) What Explains Wage Gaps between Farm and City? Exploring the Todaro Model with American Evidence, 1890-1941. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 40 (2). pp. 267-294. DOI https://doi.org/10.1086/451940
Kemp, Gordon CR (1992) The potential for efficiency gains in estimation from the use of additional moment restrictions. Journal of Econometrics, 53 (1-3). pp. 387-399. DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-4076(92)90093-7
Smith, E and Wright, R (1992) Why Is Automobile Insurance in Philadelphia So Damn Expensive? American Economic Review, 82 (4). pp. 756-72.
Williamson, JG and Hatton, T (1992) International Migration and World Development: A Historical Perspective. UNSPECIFIED. Harvard Institute of Economic Research Working Papers.