Richard Bluhm
Maastricht Graduate School of Governance
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Featured researches published by Richard Bluhm.
Archive | 2013
Richard Bluhm; Denis de Crombrugghe; Adam Szirmai
This working paper is part of the research programme on Institutions, Governance and Longterm Economic Growth, a partnership between the French Development Agency AFD and the Maastricht Graduate School of Governance Maastricht University UNUMerit. The research builds on the Institutional Profiles Database IPD, jointly developed by AFD and the French Ministry of the Economy since 2001.
Macroeconomic Dynamics | 2016
Richard Bluhm; Denis de Crombrugghe; Adam Szirmai
This paper analyzes periods of economic stagnation in a panel of countries. We test whether stagnation can be predicted by institutional characteristics and political shocks and compare the impacts of such variables with those of traditional macroeconomic variables. We examine the determinants of stagnation episodes using dynamic linear and nonlinear models. In addition, we analyze whether the effects of the included variables on the onset of stagnation differ from their effects on the continuation of stagnation. We find that inflation, negative regime changes, real exchange rate undervaluation, financial openness, and trade openness have significant effects on both the onset and the continuation of stagnation. Only for trade openness is there robust evidence of a differential impact. Open economies have a significantly lower probability of falling into stagnation, but once in stagnation they do not recover faster.
Archive | 2014
Richard Bluhm; Denis de Crombrugghe; Adam Szirmai
This paper analyzes periods of economic stagnation in a panel of countries. We test whether stagnation can be predicted by institutional characteristics and political shocks, and compare the impacts of such variables with those of traditional macroeconomic variables. We examine the determinants of stagnation episodes using dynamic linear and non-linear models. In addition, we analyze whether the effects of the included variables on the onset of stagnation differ from the effects on the continuation of stagnation. We find that inflation, negative regime changes, real exchange rate undervaluation, financial openness, and trade openness have significant effects on both the onset and the continuation of stagnation. Only for trade openness there is robust evidence of a differential impact. Open economies have a significantly lower probability of falling into stagnation, but once in stagnation they do not recover faster.
Archive | 2014
Richard Bluhm; Denis de Crombrugghe; Adam Szirmai
Archive | 2014
Richard Bluhm; Denis de Crombrugghe; Adam Szirmai
Hannover Economic Papers (HEP) | 2015
Richard Bluhm; Kaj Thomsson
Archive | 2016
Denis de Crombrugghe; Richard Bluhm; A. Fosu
Annual Conference 2016 (Augsburg): Demographic Change | 2016
Richard Bluhm; Martin Gassebner; Sarah Langlotz; Paul Schaudt
Annual Conference 2015 (Muenster): Economic Development - Theory and Policy | 2015
Richard Bluhm; Kaj Thomsson
Archive | 2014
Richard Bluhm; Denis de Crombrugghe; Adam Szirmai