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The editors are pleased to offer the following papers to the reader
in recognition and appreciation of the contributions to our
literature made by Robert Engle and Sir Clive Granger, winners of
the 2003 Nobel Prize in Economics. The basic themes of this part of
Volume 20 of Advances in Econometrics are time varying betas of the
capital asset pricing model, analysis of predictive densities of
nonlinear models of stock returns, modelling multivariate dynamic
correlations, flexible seasonal time series models, estimation of
long-memory time series models, the application of the technique of
boosting in volatility forecasting, the use of different time
scales in GARCH modelling, out-of-sample evaluation of the Fed
Model in stock price valuation, structural change as an alternative
to long memory, the use of smooth transition auto-regressions in
stochastic volatility modelling, the analysis of the balanced-ness
of regressions analyzing Taylor-Type rules of the Fed Funds rate, a
mixture-of-experts approach for the estimation of stochastic
volatility, a modern assessment of Clives first published paper on
Sunspot activity, and a new class of models of tail-dependence in
time series subject to jumps.
*This Series: Aids in the diffusion of new econometric
techniques
* Emphasis is placed on expositional clarity and ease of
assimilation for readers who are unfamiliar with a given topic of a
volume
*Illustrates new concepts
The editors are pleased to offer the following papers to the reader
in recognition and appreciation of the contributions to our
literature made by Robert Engle and Sir Clive Granger, winners of
the 2003 Nobel Prize in Economics. The basic themes of this part of
Volume 20 of Advances in Econometrics are time varying betas of the
capital asset pricing model, analysis of predictive densities of
nonlinear models of stock returns, modelling multivariate dynamic
correlations, flexible seasonal time series models, estimation of
long-memory time series models, the application of the technique of
boosting in volatility forecasting, the use of different time
scales in GARCH modelling, out-of-sample evaluation of the Fed
Model in stock price valuation, structural change as an alternative
to long memory, the use of smooth transition auto-regressions in
stochastic volatility modelling, the analysis of the balanced-ness
of regressions analyzing Taylor-Type rules of the Fed Funds rate, a
mixture-of-experts approach for the estimation of stochastic
volatility, a modern assessment of Clives first published paper on
Sunspot activity, and a new class of models of tail-dependence in
time series subject to jumps.
*This Series: Aids in the diffusion of new econometric
techniques
*Emphasis is placed on expositional clarity and ease of
assimilation for readers who are unfamiliar with a given topic of a
volume
*Illustrates new concepts
The 30th Volume of Advances in Econometrics is in honor of the two
individuals whose hard work has helped ensure thirty successful
years of the series, Thomas Fomby and R. Carter Hill. This volume
began with a history of the Advances series by Asli Ogunc and
Randall Campbell summarizing the prior volumes. Tom Fomby and
Carter Hill both provide discussions of the role of Advances over
the years. The remaining articles include contributions by a number
of authors who have played key roles in the series over the years
and in the careers of Fomby and Hill. Overall, this leads to a more
diverse mix of papers than a typical volume of Advances in
Econometrics.
Including contributions spanning a variety of theoretical and
applied topics in econometrics, this volume of Advances in
Econometrics is published in honour of Cheng Hsiao. In the first
few chapters of this book, new theoretical panel and time series
results are presented, exploring JIVE estimators, HAC, HAR and
various sandwich estimators, as well as asymptotic distributions
for using information criteria to distinguish between the unit root
model and explosive models. Other chapters address topics such as
structural breaks or growth empirics; auction models; and
semiparametric methods testing for common vs. individual trends.
Three chapters provide novel empirical approaches to applied
problems, such as estimating the impact of survey mode on
responses, or investigating how cross-sectional and spatial
dependence of mortgages varies by default rates and geography. In
the final chapters, Cheng Hsiao offers a forward-focused discussion
of the role of big data in economics. For any researcher of
econometrics, this is an unmissable volume of the most current and
engaging research in the field.
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