Current Research
Trust and social distance in Cameroon
In this research we use experimental data collected in rural Cameroon
to quantify the extent to which people are more trusting of people
in their own village than they are of people in a neighbouring village.
Trust is measured using the Trust Game. To test for the possibility
that Senders in the Trust Game may be motivated by unconditional
kindness, Senders also play a Triple Dictator Game. In addition,
to test for the possibility that Senders are motivated by attitudes
to risk, Senders also play a Risk Game.
Endogenous Labour Supply, International Trade and Macroeconomic
Dynamics
This paper shows that the way labour supply is determined in a
model of international business cycle transmission affects how well
the model can replicate business cycle co-movement and match the
empirical regularities of the labour market. Using a popular model
(Ghironi and Melitz, 2005) and incorporating endogenously determined
labour supply, the model is able to match many stylized facts in
the presence of frictionless asset trade when there are mild income
effects present in labour supply. When there are high costs to buying
foreign assets, labour supply without income effects is shown to
be vital in producing international co-movement.
Capital Accumulation, Non-traded Goods and International Macroeconomic
Dynamics with Heterogeneous Firms
This paper incorporates capital accumulation into a popular international
business cycle model (Ghironi and Melitz, 2005) by adding capital
inputs to final, non-traded goods production. The model shows that
shocks to the production of traded intermediate inputs are not sufficient
to replicate the dynamic features of imports, exports, the terms
of trade and the real exchange rate. When shocks to final goods
production are present, the model can better replicate both international
co-movement and the volatility of international trade.
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Virtual Boundaries in New Zealand Waters: An Agent-based Model
of Fishing Quota Value
This study identifies the impact of marine protected areas (MPAs)
on holders of fishing quotas in New Zealand by constructing a virtual
environment populated by agents with individual characteristics
and private information. Based on imposed behavioural rules, individuals
interact with each other and react to the world around them, generating
emergent aggregate market patterns. This model is intended to show
how individuals respond to policies that do not yet exist and to
predict potential impacts to the market for fishing quotas.
Virtual Scientific Practice and the Rise and Fall of Research
Programmes
This study constructs a virtual environment populated by scientific
researchers, each with individual abilities and private information.
Based on simple rules, scientists choose how much of their natural
ability to spend on emerging research, how closely they follow established
scientific practices (i.e. adhere to existing scientific research
programmes) and how much to interact with other scientists in their
field. The model is intended to show how scientific research programs
rise and fall and determine whether or not a “true”,
unique scientific approach will exist.
David Fielding (with S. Torres,
Ministry of Industry, Uruguay, and M. McGillivray, Deakin University
and AusAID)
Structural models of social and economic development
This project extends existing work on inequality and economic
development by developing structural models to identify bi-directional
relationships between income inequality and other indicators of
social and economic development. Overall, lower inequality is associated
with improvements in other development indicators, but this is the
result of several complex interactions. The most striking feature
of the structural model is the insight it provides into the reasons
behind the negative "Africa dummy" in previous cross-country
growth studies.
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David Fielding (with A. Shortland,
University of Leicester)
1. The civil war in Peru
This project looks at the factors influencing changes in the intensity
of the civil war in Peru over the period 1982-1997. We look at the
ways in which Peruvian government and rebel forces respond to actions
by the enemy, to economic conditions and to economic and military
interventions by foreign governments.
2. The economics of insurgency and political repression in Egypt
This project looks at the different ways in which the intensity
of state-insurgent conflict in Egypt interacts with economic factors.
It includes studies of the impact of the conflict on different sectors
of the Egyptian economy, focussing particularly on the financial
sector and on tourism.
David Fielding (with K. Shields,
University of Melbourne)
Distributional consequences of monetary policy
This project looks at the impact of monetary policy on disaggregated
prices and unemployment in several different monetary areas. Prices
are disaggregated both by commodity type and by region within the
monetary area. In this way we can see the extent to which the impact
of policy on the poor (with a greater risk of unemployment and a
different consumption profile) differs from the impact on the rich,
and whether there is any regional heterogeneity in these effects.
Aid per capita or aid as a share of GDP: What matters for economic
growth?
An influential paper by Burnside and Dollar argues that aid leads
to higher rates of economic growth, but only in countries with good
economic policies. We argue that this result hinges crucially on
whether aid is measured as a ratio of GDP, or as aid per capita.
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Aid allocation and governance
Using panel data on aid to individual developing countries, this
project examines the recipient characteristics that motivate donor
aid allocations. When aid is disaggregated by sector (for example,
when we look at health aid or emergency relief), it appears that
relative deprivation is one of the factors influencing aid allocations.
However, recipient country political characteristics also matter.
Some – but by no means all – of these are characteristics
that impact on aid effectiveness.
David Fielding (with S. Adrianova,
University of Leicester, B. Baltagi, University of Syracuse and
P. Demetriades, University of Leicester)
Excess liquidity in African banking
In this project we develop a theoretical model to explore the
reasons why African banks have much higher liquidity ratios than
banks in other parts of the world. The model focuses on the types
of moral hazard and adverse selection that are likely to be a particular
feature of credit markets in Africa. The predictions of the model
are tested using panel data on the characteristics and asset choices
of individual African banks.
Arlene Garces-Ozanne
(with Maria Varua, University of Western Sydney)
Short-run Macroeconomic Determinants and Impact on the Philippine
Economy of Remittances
This paper examines the macroeconomic determinants of remittance
flows to the Philippines over the period January 1989 to March 2008,
including other potential macroeconomic determinants of remittances
like natural disasters and the political situation in the remittance
receiving country that other studies have not previously included
in the analysis. This paper also examines carefully the time series
properties of the relevant variables as well as the short-run and
long-run relationships among the variables of interest. We also
estimate an error correction model (ECM) with time-varying parameters
(TVP) to allow for the probability that some coefficients may be
time-varying.
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A Meta-analysis of Government Expenditure and Economic Growth
This paper aims to examine the literature on the impact of government
expenditure on economic growth.
Arlene Garces-Ozanne
(with Rukmani Gounder, Massey University)
The effects of overseas workers’ remittances and foreign
aid on the economic growth of developing countries, using panel
data
This research will examine remittances and economic growth in developing
countries, highlighting possible interactions between remittances
and two important factors: exchange rate volatility and timing of
remittances, and how these interactions affect not only economic
growth but also other dimensions of growth, in particular, poverty
levels in the developing countries. This research uses panel data
and time-series analyses.
Arlene Garces-Ozanne
(with Binevenido Oplas, Minimal Government Movement, Philippines)
Flat is beautiful
This paper examines the feasibility of a flat personal tax in the
Philippines and how this could potentially contribute to higher
economic growth.
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Murat Genç (with Murray
D. Smith, University of Aberdeen)
Wage gaps in the New Zealand Labour Market
Using data from the Statistics New Zealand’s 2003 CURF (Confidentialised
Unit Record File) data set, we estimate wage regressions taking
account of sample selection bias arising from the exclusion of individuals
with no market income. We use the copula approach in the specification
of sample selection models. We find evidence of a statistically
and economically significant female/male differential. Ethnicity,
however, is found to matter for certain groups only, not for Maori.
Migration and Tourism Flows to New Zealand
This project uses the most commonly used specification in empirical
trade research, the gravity equation, to establish the determinants
of tourism flows to New Zealand. It estimates a gravity model by
using an unbalanced panel data set consisting of more than 190 countries
that New Zealand has traded with between the years 1981 and 2006.
The estimation technique employed is based on a panel Poisson model.
Murat Genç (with Jacques
Poot, University of Waikato, Peter Nijkamp and Masood Gheasi, VU
University in Amsterdam)
Immigration and Trade: A Meta-Analysis
The aim of this research is to analyse the effect of immigrants
on trade flows by means of a meta-analytic evaluation of various
econometric studies that have incorporated the number of immigrants
as an explanatory variable in regression models they used.
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1. Expropriation of Foreign Direct Investments: Sectoral Patterns
from 1993 to 2006
In this paper I document expropriation of foreign direct investment
(FDI) in all developing countries for the 1993-2006 period, building
on previous work by Kobrin (1984) and Minor (1994). This unique
data set on worldwide expropriation by industry between 1960 and
2006 is used to highlight several (potentially interrelated) stylized
facts. First, we find that, although expropriations occur less often
today when compared to the 1970s, the number of takings has been
rising over the past decade. Second, foreign firms appear to be
more vulnerable to expropriation in resource-based sectors, particularly
in mining and petroleum. Third, we find that the timing of expropriation
coincides with fluctuations in mineral output price levels. Finally,
sector FDI stock estimates are also constructed for a large sample
of developing countries and, comparing the sectoral distribution
of FDI of recent expropriating countries to that of non-expropriating
countries, we find that expropriating countries have a higher average
share of aggregate FDI located in resources. However, this difference
is not reflected in average sector production shares. This last
fact is puzzling given that natural resource-based FDI has traditionally
been considered high risk.
2. Resource-based FDI and Expropriation in Developing Economies
Expropriation of foreign direct investment (FDI) is more likely
to occur in resource extraction than in other sectors. Despite the
higher risk of expropriation, countries viewed as more likely to
expropriate (having expropriated in the recent past) also have a
disproportionate share of FDI in the resource sector. In this paper
I develop an incomplete markets model of FDI that can account for
this puzzle. In one sector of the economy, a resource sector, the
government manages a stock of mineral rights. The type of government
regime is stochastic, with low-penalty regimes facing a relatively
low, exogenous cost of expropriating FDI. The key innovation of
the model is that the government, before the regime type is known,
is able to charge different prices to domestic and foreign investors
for the rights to extract the mineral. Granting cheap access raises
FDI while reducing the country’s share of resource rents,
increasing the temptation to expropriate ex post. When the penalty
faced in the low-penalty regime is very small (the country is high-risk),
a subsidy to resource FDI increases the total value of output by
raising investment, and the net gains from expropriating in a low
penalty regime outweigh the rents foregone under a high-penalty
one. Furthermore, when the resource output price is stochastic,
relatively low-risk countries instead restrict FDI inflows to the
resource sector: “windfall profits” in the resource
sector raise incentives to expropriate when prices are high, yet
minimization of the ex ante risk of expropriation is preferred owing
to the high cost of expropriating. These results imply a higher
average share of resource-based FDI in countries most likely to
expropriate, while resources account for a high share of expropriated
assets compared to the sector’s global share of FDI.
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Chris Hajzler (with James
MacGee, University of Western Ontario)
Retail Price Differences across U.S. and Canadian Cities during
the Interwar Period
Recent studies using detailed goods prices across geographical
locations have found that distance, shipping costs, and nominal
rigidities are important in explaining the size and persistence
of price dispersion both within and across countries. This literature
has also identified a sizeable “border effect”. Examining
a panel of retail food prices in 69 Canadian and 51 U.S. cities
during the Interwar period, we find that average relative price
dispersion across cities is very similar to estimates for the postwar
period, and distance is equally important for explaining relative
price differences. We also find that changes in exchange rate regime
have a large impact on the estimated border effect.
Alfred Haug (with P. Siklos,
Wilfrid Laurier University)
The Role of Alternative Empirical Taylor Rule Specifications
The project evaluates the conduct of monetary policy based on
different implementations of so-called Taylor rules, including the
monetary policy of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. Various alternative
models for the time series processes of the variables involved are
studied.
Alfred Haug (with S. Basher,
Central Bank of Qatar and Perry Sadorsky, York University)
Oil price movements and financial markets in emerging economies
This project examines the relationship between oil prices, exchange
rates and emerging stock markets. A structural vector-autoregression
(SVAR) is designed for this purpose. The model fits well and supports
stylised facts regarding contemporaneous and dynamic relations between
oil prices, exchange rates, and emerging stock markets. Various
extensions are considered in order to assess the role of oil price
shocks for financial markets in emerging economies.
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Alfred Haug (with William G.
Dewald, Ohio State University, and Andreas Beyer, European Central
Bank)
Interest rates and inflation
This research studies the long-term relationship between inflation
expectations and how they are reflected in nominal interest rates.
The first part of the project tests the so-called Fisher hypothesis
in the presence of structural change. The second part takes an historical
perspective with data that extend back to 1880.
Alfred Haug (with Andreas Beyer,
European Central Bank)
Inference on cointegrating vectors under structural breaks: Monetary
policy in the Euro area
This research examines the role of monetary aggregates in relation
to the interest rate, income and the housing market. The stability
of such relationships is tested with break tests that allow for
multiple structural changes at unknown points in time, in the presence
of unit roots and cointegration.
Alan King (with Carlyn Dobson,
Nottingham Business School, Nottingham Trent University)
The income convergence hypothesis
This research investigates whether per capita income levels in
OECD economies are converging with that of the United States using
linear and nonlinear unit root tests.
Alan King (with Michael Beenstock,
Department of Economics, Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
The Taylor rule
This research considers how well the Taylor rule describes monetary
policy in New Zealand since the mid-1990s.
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US trade in tourism
This research estimates equilibrium-correction models of US imports
and exports of tourism. A particular focus of the study is on estimating
the short- and long-run effects of 9/11 (and the subsequent War
on Terror) on US trade in tourism.
Stephen Knowles (with Hari
Bansha Dulal and Roberto Foa, World Bank)
Social capital and cross-country environmental performance
This research empirically analyses whether countries with higher
levels of social capital perform better environmentally. Although
there is a substantial literature on the effects of social capital
on the environment using community level data, previous empirical
work on the effects of social capital on measures of environmental
outcomes across countries has been limited by data on social capital
only being available for a relatively small number of countries.
This paper makes use of a new World Bank data set, measuring different
dimensions of social capital for a much larger number of countries,
to analyse the relationship between social capital and the environment
across countries.
Dorian Owen (with Liam Lenten,
La Trobe University)
Competitive balance and competition design in sports leagues
Competitive balance (CB), how evenly teams are matched, is a central
concept in the economic analysis of sports leagues. This study develops
measures of CB that take into account key characteristics of competition
design (especially the nature of playing schedules, draws worth
different proportions of a win, bonus points, and ‘multiple
prizes’ in a single league), features generally ignored in
commonly used CB measures. Econometric analysis of different sports
is used to reveal which of these measures are most relevant for
fans’ interest and the implications for competition design
are considered.
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Dynamic within-season measures of competitive balance in sports
leagues
Most measures of within-season competitive balance (CB) focus
on end-of-season outcomes such as final win percentages. This study
examines the evolution of CB as the season progresses and the implications
for fans’ interest in individual matches and overall interest
in the league.
Dorian Owen (with Nick King and
Rick Audas)
Playoff uncertainty, match uncertainty and attendance at Australian
National Rugby League matches
The 'uncertainty of outcome hypothesis' (UOH) postulates that
a positive relationship exists between spectator interest and the
uncertainty of outcome of individual matches and of the overall
competition. This study develops a simulation-based measure of playoff
uncertainty and investigates the effects of both match uncertainty
and playoff uncertainty on match attendance using Australian National
Rugby League data.
Fundamental determinants of economic development
Several recent influential empirical studies have used simple
models to attempt to identify the fundamental factors that underpin
long-term growth and development. The main emphasis in the existing
literature is on examining the effects of the quality of a country’s
institutions and its geographical characteristics on GDP per capita.
This project examines a wider range of measures of economic development,
considers informal as well as formal institutions, and applies recent
advances in the methodology of econometric model selection and instrumental
variables estimation to test which fundamental factors matter most.
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Health and economic growth
Theoretical and micro-level studies suggest that improved health
status has a positive effect on productivity. However, recent work
by Acemoglu and Johnson (2007) argues that, even though health improvements
may directly enhance welfare, their effect on economic growth at
the aggregate level does not significantly increase per capita income.
This research project analyses different aspects of the two-way
aggregate relationship between improvements in health status and
economic growth using cross-section, time-series and panel data
methods.
Paul Thorsnes (with Robert
Alexander, University of the Sunshine Coast)
Housing market effects of exogenous urban amenities
We take advantage of an unusual house-sales data set to estimate
the short-run effects on sale prices and long-run effects on house
and neighbourhood characteristics of local variation in natural
and historical amenities.
Paul Thorsnes (with Rob Lawson
and John Williams, University of Otago Department of Marketing)
Residential response to time-of-use electricity pricing
We analyse survey and electricity usage data from a sample of
Auckland households who participated in a one-year experiment with
static daily peak/off-peak electricity pricing.
Paul Thorsnes (with Rob Lawson,
University of Otago Marketing, Gerry Carrington, University of Otago
Physics, Janet Stephenson, University of Otago Centre for Sustainable
Agriculture, Food and Environment, and Barry Barton, University
of Waikato Law)
Energy cultures: barriers to household adoption of energy efficient
technologies and practices
With funding from the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology
we take an inter-disciplinary approach to gain insight into householder
decision-making with respect to adoption of energy efficient space
and water heating technologies and practices.
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Paul Thorsnes (with Colin
Smithies, Tim Bishop and Ben Wells)
Combining market with survey data to estimate willingness to pay
for heating-efficiency improvements
With funding from a University of Otago research grant we measured
heating efficiency and improvements in a sample of houses that sold
in 2005. The householders completed a choice modelling exercise
to provide data for estimation of demand parameters.
Parental divorce and trust
This paper examines the effect of parental divorce during childhood
on generalised trust later on in life The analysis is conducted
using pooled probit and pooled IV probit to account for possible
endogeneity issues. The results indicate that men are 20% less likely
to trust in people in general. The results are not significant for
women for whom parental divorce does not have a significant effect
on their expressed level of generalised trust.
The wage gap of motherhood revisited
This paper examines the impact of children on female wages in
the UK using the National Child Development Study. It improves on
previous empirical studies by simultaneously correcting for the
selection effects associated with fertility and labour force participation.
Assuming no such selection bias, we confirm previous studies and
estimate the wage differential between women without children and
women with children to range between 19% and 22%. However, the results
indicate substantial non-random selection into employment. The previous
estimates are thus biased. Accounting for selection effects, the
estimated wage differential between mothers and childless women
is reduced to 10%-13%.
Public policy and eldercare in Europe
This paper demonstrates that increasing government expenditure
on formal residential and home-help for the elderly can significantly
increase the labour force participation rates of women across Europe
by relieving their informal care burden. Allowing for country fixed-effects
and country-specific trends and correcting for attrition, the estimates
- based on the European Community Household Panel - imply that a
1000 Euro increase in the government expenditure on formal residential
care and home-help services for the elderly decreases the probability
of informal care-giving outside of the caregiver’s household
by 6 percentage points. Formal care substitutes for informal care
that is undertaken outside of the carer’s own household, but
does not substitute for intergenerational household formation. A
simulation exercise shows that an increase in government formal
care expenditure is a cost-effective way of increasing the labour
force participation rates.
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Tarja Viitanen (with Libertad
Gonzalez, Universitat Pompeu fabra)
Long-term effects of legalizing divorce on children
This paper estimates the effect of divorce legalization on the
long-term well-being of children, by exploiting the different timing
of divorce legalization across Europe. We compare the adult outcomes
of cohorts raised when divorce was banned with those of cohorts
raised after divorce was legalized in the same country. We also
have “control” countries where all cohorts were exposed
(or not exposed) to legal divorce as children. We find that women
who grew up under legal divorce have lower earnings and income and
worse health as adults compared with women who grew up under illegal
divorce. These negative effects are not found for men.
Tarja Viitanen (with Arnaud
Chevalier, Royal Holloway University of London)
Partial versus general equilibrium effects of a voucher program
This paper uses a unique setup to compare the partial and the
general equilibrium effects of a voucher program. The voucher was
initially adopted as an experiment, provided to be used towards
the payment for private childcare, in an economy with a universal,
low-cost public care option. After three years, the private care
voucher was adopted nationally. In this paper, the initial experiment
provides the usual program evaluation method to analyze the partial
equilibrium effect of the voucher on labor supply and characteristics
of the childcare market. The general equilibrium effect, on the
other hand, is analyzed as the private care voucher was adopted
in the rest of the country.
Niven Winchester (with
Ashley Dunstan, Reserve Bank of New Zealand)
Firm heterogeneity and the border effect
Chaney (2006) finds that, for a given trade cost, the border effect
is greater when there is a large number of small firms than when
a sector is dominated by a small number of large firms. This study
contributes to the border effect literature by conducting an alternative
empirical test of Chaney’s hypothesis that is novel in two
ways. First, our study evaluates the contribution of firm heterogeneity
to the border effect using a larger number of variables thought
to influence international trade than considered by Chaney. Second,
we construct a measure of firm heterogeneity using production data
sourced from all countries included in our cross section rather
than relying on data from a single country.
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1. Implicit trade costs and New Zealand’s bilateral negotiations
Like most developed nations, New Zealand has energetically pursued
bilateral trade agreements in recent years. This project evaluates
welfare changes resulting from various trade agreements involving
New Zealand by considering reductions in tariff and non-tariff barriers
(NTBs), such as technical, administrative and regulatory standards
and customs clearance procedures, in a computable general equilibrium
model. We use a series of gravity equations to estimate tariff equivalents
of NTBs.
2. Computerisation and the polarisation of UK wages
This project provides an empirical test of Autor, Katz and Kearney’s
(2006) model of computerisation and wages where computers complement
highly paid workers, directly substitute for middle-wage jobs and
have little impact on low-wage jobs. This is done by identifying
several labour types and four capital assets in a UK-focused computable
general equilibrium model. We shock the model by imposing observed
changes in employment and capital stock shares (accounting for quality
improvements in computers) and compare simulated and observed changes
in the UK wage distribution.
3. The optimal allocation of Super Rugby competition points
This project evaluates the appropriateness of the allocation of
competition points in Super Rugby. We do this by building a model
to predict the outcome of Super Rugby matches that includes relative
team strength as an explanatory variable. By constructing strength
indexes based on Super Rugby competition points earned by each team
and choosing competition points endogenously so as to minimise prediction
errors, we determine the allocation of Super Rugby competition points
that provides the best measure of team strength.
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