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Macroeconomic Dynamics | 2011

OIL PRICE SHOCKS AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: IS THE RELATIONSHIP LINEAR?

Ana María Herrera; Latika Gupta Lagalo; Tatsuma Wada

This paper tests the three leading specifications of asymmetric and possibly nonlinear feedback from the real price of oil to U.S. industrial production and its sectoral components. We show that the evidence for such feedback is sensitive to the estimation period. Support for a nonlinear model is strongest for samples starting before 1973. Instead, using post-1973 data only, the evidence against symmetry becomes considerably weaker. For example, at the aggregate level, there is no evidence against the hypothesis of symmetric responses to oil price innovations of typical magnitude, consistent with results of Kilian and Vigfusson [ Quantitative Economics , 2(3), 419–453 (2011)] for U.S. real GDP. There is strong evidence of asymmetries at the disaggregate level, however, especially for industries that are energy-intensive in production (such as chemicals) or that produce goods that are energy-intensive in use (such as transportation equipment). Our analysis suggests that these asymmetries may be obscured in the aggregate data and highlights the importance of developing multisector models of the transmission of oil price shocks.


Applied Economics | 2014

International stock market efficiency: a non-Bayesian time-varying model approach

Mikio Ito; Akihiko Noda; Tatsuma Wada

This article develops a non-Bayesian methodology to analyse the time-varying structure of international linkages and market efficiency in G7 countries. We consider a non-Bayesian time-varying vector autoregressive (TV-VAR) model, and apply it to estimate the joint degree of market efficiency in the sense of Fama (1970, 1991). Our empirical results provide a new perspective that the international linkages and market efficiency change over time and that their behaviours correspond well to historical events of the international financial system.


Industrial Relations | 2010

Immigration of Nurses

David E. Kalist; Stephen J. Spurr; Tatsuma Wada

It is often argued that it will be hard to detect negative effects on wages and employment of natives in local markets, because natives will avoid a market which many immigrants have entered. This study finds no support for this hypothesis in this market, based on data that measures the rate of entry of RNs exactly. We find no adverse effect of immigration on native workers in this occupation.This paper examines the effects of immigration on a specific occupation, registered nurses (RNs). To learn whether immigrant nurses reduced the earnings of RNs, we applied techniques developed by Goldin (1994) and Borjas, Freeman, and Katz (1996), but found the effect of immigrant penetration either positive or insignificant. We also found that the supply of immigrant RNs was far more elastic than the supply coming from natives. It is often argued that it will be hard to detect negative effects on wages and employment of natives in local markets, because natives will avoid a market which many immigrants have entered. This study finds no support for this hypothesis in this market, based on data that measures the rate of entry of RNs exactly. We find no adverse effect of immigration on native workers in this occupation.


Macroeconomic Dynamics | 2014

THE ROLE OF TRANSITORY AND PERSISTENT SHOCKS IN THE CONSUMPTION CORRELATION AND INTERNATIONAL COMOVEMENT PUZZLES

Tatsuma Wada

We study a two-country model with changes in the technological growth rate. Such changes are attributed to transitory and persistent shocks in the growth rate of technology. Cases are considered in which agents in two countries do not have enough information to distinguish between the two types of shocks; gradually, however, the persistence of the shock is recognized through the learning process. Utilizing a set of parameters obtained from U.S. and European productivity growth rates, it is then shown that (i) when persistent shocks affect the two countries identically, there is no consumption-correlation puzzle, and the international comovement puzzle becomes imperceptible; and (ii) even when persistent shocks affect the two countries differently, imperfect information plays an important role in explaining both the consumption-correlation puzzle and the international comovement puzzle (provided transitory shocks are strongly internationally correlated and are relatively larger than persistent shocks).


Journal of Monetary Economics | 2009

Let's take a break: Trends and cycles in US real GDP

Pierre Perron; Tatsuma Wada


Journal of International Money and Finance | 2015

Asymmetries in the response of economic activity to oil price increases and decreases

Ana María Herrera; Latika Gupta Lagalo; Tatsuma Wada


arXiv: Statistical Finance | 2012

The Evolution of Market Efficiency and its Periodicity: A Non-Bayesian Time-Varying Model Approach

Mikio Ito; Akihiko Noda; Tatsuma Wada


arXiv: Statistical Finance | 2016

Time-Varying Comovement of Foreign Exchange Markets

Mikio Ito; Akihiko Noda; Tatsuma Wada


Economics Letters | 2012

On the correlations of trend–cycle errors

Tatsuma Wada


arXiv: Methodology | 2017

An Alternative Estimation Method of a Time-Varying Parameter Model

Mikio Ito; Akihiko Noda; Tatsuma Wada

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David E. Kalist

Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania

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