Affiliation:
1. Institute for Labor Studies West Virginia University Morgantown, West Virginia 26506-6031 USA
2. Department of Business Administration and Economics Edinboro University of Pennsylvania Edinboro, Pennsylvania 16444 USA
Abstract
Regional scientists have long been interested in measuring the effects of various external and internal stimuli on a regional economy. Measuring the actual size and timing of exogenous and endogenous impacts has been of special interest, as numerical or estimation techniques allow regional actors (governments, business, and others) to make policy-type probability statements and actions in response to changes to these stimuli. Recently, the use of vector autoregressive (VAR) models and, consequently, impulse response functions has become increasingly popular. This paper will closely examine the VAR methodology and its assumptions and will address the types of empirical issues that arise from actual regional implementation. The issues of stationarity, model specification and selection, order determination, and impulse responses are discussed.
Subject
General Social Sciences,General Environmental Science
Cited by
5 articles.
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