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    <dc:publisher>Economics: The Open-Access, Open Assessment E-Journal</dc:publisher>
    <dc:publisher>http://www.economics-ejournal.org</dc:publisher>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>

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<dc:creator>Stephane Dees</dc:creator>
<dc:creator>Sean Holly</dc:creator>
<dc:creator>M. Hashem Pesaran</dc:creator>
<dc:creator>L. Vanessa Smith</dc:creator>
<dc:title>Long Run Macroeconomic Relations in the Global Economy</dc:title>
<dc:date>2007-03-01</dc:date>
<dc:description>This paper focuses on testing long run macroeconomic relations for interest rates, equity,
prices and exchange rates within a model of the global economy. It considers a number of
plausible long run relationships suggested by arbitrage in financial and goods markets, and
uses the global vector autoregressive (GVAR) model developed in Dees, di Mauro, Pesaran and
Smith (2007) to test for long run restrictions in each country/region conditioning on the
rest of the world. Bootstrapping is used to compute both the empirical distribution of the
impulse responses and the log-likelihood ratio statistic for over-identifying
restrictions. The paper also examines the speed with which adjustments to the long run
relations take place via the persistence profiles. We find strong evidence in favour of the
uncovered interest parity and to a lesser extent the Fisher equation across a number of
countries, but our results for the PPP are much weaker. Also as to be expected, the
transmission of shocks and subsequent adjustments in financial markets are much faster than
those in goods markets.</dc:description>
<dc:identifier>http://www.economics-ejournal.org/economics/discussionpapers/2007-7</dc:identifier>
<dc:subject>JEL C32</dc:subject>
<dc:subject>JEL E17</dc:subject>
<dc:subject>JEL F47</dc:subject>
<dc:subject>JEL R11</dc:subject>


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