Pages that link to "Item:Q1925617"
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The following pages link to Business cycles through international shocks: a structural investigation (Q1925617):
Displaying 17 items.
- Do credit market shocks drive output fluctuations? Evidence from corporate spreads and defaults (Q433370) (← links)
- International business cycles, financial markets and household production (Q1128633) (← links)
- Composite habits and international transmission of business cycles (Q1655621) (← links)
- By force of demand: explaining cyclical fluctuations of international trade and government spending (Q1655734) (← links)
- Capital flows and the business cycle (Q2338509) (← links)
- How do emerging markets respond to macroeconomic shocks? -- Dynamic panel evidence on the effects of disasters (Q2416267) (← links)
- The international business cycle in a changing world: Volatility and the propagation of shocks in the G-7 (Q2431774) (← links)
- The transmission of shocks between Europe, Japan and the United States (Q3065492) (← links)
- INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS CYCLES IN EMERGING MARKETS (Q3299417) (← links)
- MACROECONOMIC VOLATILITY AND INTERNATIONAL INTEGRATION (Q3466903) (← links)
- International Business Cycle Asymmetry and Time Irreversible Nonlinearities (Q3592644) (← links)
- International Co-movements of Business Cycles in a 'Phase-locking' Model (Q4542106) (← links)
- THE ROLE OF TECHNOLOGY AND NONTECHNOLOGY SHOCKS IN BUSINESS CYCLES* (Q4620047) (← links)
- BUSINESS CYCLES IN SMALL OPEN ECONOMIES: EVIDENCE FROM PANEL DATA BETWEEN 1900 AND 2013 (Q5370544) (← links)
- Can world real interest rates explain business cycles in a small open economy? (Q5940861) (← links)
- Global shocks in the US economy: effects on output and the real exchange rate (Q6049594) (← links)
- Productivity shocks and capital flows (Q6172327) (← links)