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21st New
Zealand Econometric Study Group Meeting Dunedin, 25-26 February
2011
The 21st Meeting of the New Zealand Econometric Study Group (NZESG)
was held at the Otago Museum (Hutton Theatre) in Dunedin on 25-26
February 2011. The meeting was hosted and supported by the Department
of Economics in the University of Otago's School of Business. Programme
Chairs for the Meeting were Professor Peter Phillips (Yale University,
The University of Auckland, University of Southampton and Singapore
Management University), Professor Alfred Haug (University of Otago)
and Professor Dorian Owen (University of Otago).
The NZESG was founded in February 1997; its first meeting was a
one-day workshop with 15 participants. This year the programme ran
over two days, with 25 papers being presented covering a wide range
of topics in theoretical and applied econometrics grouped into seven
sessions (empirical macroeconomics, empirical microeconomics, international
economics, empirical finance, dynamic modelling and two sessions
on econometric theory). Taking part were over thirty participants;
these included a strong contingent of international visitors from
Australia, Canada, Japan, Korea, UK and USA, as well as representatives
from most New Zealand universities and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
The NZESG Meeting has retained several distinctive features, including
a single stream of presentations, with a discussant assigned to
each paper, and prestigious, international representation. Emphasis
has always been placed on encouraging, supporting and celebrating
the achievements of emerging researchers. This year, seven presenters
were eligible for the RBNZ-NZESG Awards, which are financially supported
by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and awarded on the basis of research
presented at the meeting. The overall standard of presentations
was very high and, after much deliberation, joint Awards were made
to Firmin Doko Tchatoka (University of Tasmania), Yigit Saglam (Victoria
University of Wellington) and Lynda Sanderson (RBNZ & Waikato
University). Firmin’s paper examined the sensitivity of hypothesis
testing in linear IV regressions to excluded instruments. Yigit
combined economic theory, a unique data set (on Turkish water flows,
crop compositions, and water and crop prices) and empirical analysis
to examine the implications of water pricing rules. Lynda used a
longitudinal business database for New Zealand manufacturing exporters
to analyse the effect of export market entry on firm performance.
The organisers received very positive feedback on the quality
of the programme, the organisation of the meeting, and, not least,
the ambience and interactions at the conference dinner at No 7 Balmac.
The next meeting of NZESG will be held in Wellington in 2012, hosted
by Özer Karagedikli and colleagues at the Reserve Bank.
Download the Current
programme in pdf format.
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