+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Back Matter

Back Matter

Date post: 05-Jan-2017
Category:
Upload: hoanglien
View: 213 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
12
Back Matter Source: Journal of Applied Econometrics, Vol. 13, No. 4 (Jul. - Aug., 1998), p. 425 Published by: Wiley Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/223191 . Accessed: 08/05/2014 23:16 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Wiley and John Wiley & Sons are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of Applied Econometrics. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Transcript
Page 1: Back Matter

Back MatterSource: Journal of Applied Econometrics, Vol. 13, No. 4 (Jul. - Aug., 1998), p. 425Published by: WileyStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/223191 .

Accessed: 08/05/2014 23:16

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Wiley and John Wiley & Sons are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journalof Applied Econometrics.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Back Matter

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS J. Appl. Econ. 13, 425 (1998)

FORTHCOMING PAPERS

'Optimal Univariate Inflation Forecasting with Symmetric Stable Shocks' by P. V. Bidarkota and J. H. McCulloch

'Excess Capacity: A Permanent Characteristic of U.S. Airlines?' by B. H. Baltagi, J. M. Griffin and S. R. Vadali

'A General Dependence Test and Applications' by D. Johnson and R. McClelland

'Jackknife Instrumental Variables Estimation' by J. D. Angrist, G. W. Imbens and A. Kreuger

'Intertemporal Substitution in Import Demand and Habit Formation' by D. de la Croix and J.-P. Urbain

'Causal Ordering and The Bank Lending Channel' by S. J. Perez

'Unit Roots in the Presence of Abrupt Governmental Interventions with an Application to Brazilian Data' by P. Perron, C. Cati and M. G. P. Garcia

'Estimating the Natural Rate of Unemployment and Testing the Natural Rate Hypothesis' by M. K. Salemi

'A Monte Carlo Study of the Forecasting Performance of Empirical SETAR Models' by M. P. Clements and J. Smith

'The Time-Varing Behaviour of Real Interest Rates: A Re-Evaluation of the Recent Evidence' by B. Bekdache

'Estimating the LQAC Model with 1(2) Variables' by T. Engsted and N. Haldrup

'A Nonlinear Filtering Approach to Stochastic Volatility Models with an Application to Daily Stock Returns' by T. Watanabe

'Testing for Periodically Collapsing Bubbles: A Markov-Switching Unit Root Test' by S. G. Hall, Z. Psaradakis and M. Sola

'On the Use of Variance Ratio Statistics for Real Exchange Rates' by I. Choi

'Common Cycles in Seasonal Nonstationary Time Series' by G. Cubadda

'Estimation in Large and Disaggregated Demand Systems: An Estimator for Conditionally Linear Systems' by R. Blundell and J.-M. Robin

'The Error Structure of Time Series Cross Section Hedonic Models with Sporadic Event Timing and Serial Correlation' by G. Amacher and D. Hellerstein

? 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 3: Back Matter

The Manchester

School Edited by Chris Orme, Martyn Andrews, Keith Blackburn and Eyal Winter

The Manchester School is a distinguished economics joural with an international reputation. It aims to publish original articles in both theoretical and applied economics.

ORDER FORM The Manchester School

Subscription Rates, Volume 66/1998 ISSN 0025-2034 Published in: January, March, June and September and December (supplement) Institutional Rates, ?112.00 (UK-Europe), $237.00 (N. America), ?143.00 (Rest of World) Personal Rates, ?39.00 (UK-Europe), $81.00 (N. America), ?49.00 (Rest of World)

O Please enter my subscription/send me a sample copy O I enclose a cheque/money order payable to Blackwell Publishers O Please charge my American Express/Diners Club/Mastercard/Visa account

Card Number ........................................ Expiry Date ........................

Signature ...................... ..................... Dte.............................. Name ................................................................................ Address. ............................................................................. ................................................... Postcode ..........................

email.................................................................................

Payment must accompany orders Please return this form to: Journals Marketing, Blackwell Publishers, 108 Cowley Road, Oxford, OX4 1JF, UK. Tel: +44 (0)1865 244083 Or to: Journals Marketing, MANC, Blackwell Publishers, 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA. Tel: + 1 781 388 8200

SPECIAL OFFER for 1998 R BLACI<WE LL Electronic access is included in the institutional subscription to the print edition. -l

For more information, or to order a free sample copy, visit our website

o w

U u

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 4: Back Matter

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS, VOL. 13, 99 (1998)

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS DATA ARCHIVE

INFORMATION FOR USERS

The Journal of Applied Econometrics Data Archive contains data sets from papers published in the Journal of Applied Econometrics. Since January, 1994, all authors have been required to provide their data in electronic form after their paper has been accepted, unless there are good reasons (such as confidentiality) for not doing so. The first issue for which data should normally be available is Volume 10, Number 1, 1995, but some data from papers in earlier volumes are available as well.

There are two ways to access the JAE Data Archive. The original, but relatively cumbersome, way is to use ftp. To do so, you must be on a computer that is connected to the Internet and has the program ftp. At the command line, type ftp qed.econ.queensu.ca and login as user 'ftp'. Then give your real identity as a password and type cd jae to move to the main JAE Data Archive directory. After this, you will need to issue a sequence of commands to move to the desired directories and retrieve the desired files. These commands will be familiar to anyone who has used anonymous ftp, but they are not particularly intuitive. Detailed instructions were provided on pages 106-107 of Volume 9, Number 1 (January-March 1994) of the journal.

The newer, and much easier, way to access the Data Archive is to use a World Wide Web (WWW) browser, such as Mosaic, Netscape or Lynx. You must be on a computer connected to the Internet, and it must have a suitable WWW browser. Simply point your browser to

http://qed.econ.queensu.ca/jae to see the JAE Data Archive home page. Anyone who can read English and click the left mouse button on highlighted words should then be able to obtain the data they want.

The JAE Data Archive is organized by issue and paper, with each paper having its own subdirectory. For example, clicking on 'Volume 9, Supplement, 1994' takes you to a directory that contains four subdirectories, each corresponding to one paper, plus one entry called 'Parent Directory.' Clicking on the latter takes you back to the JAE home page. Clicking on one of the other directories takes you to it. For example, suppose there were a directory called 'smith-jones.' Typically, it would contain two files, which might be called readme.sj and sj-data.zip. The first of these is a human-readable (ASCII) file that can be read by clicking on it. It should then be possible to save the file to disk by using WWW browser's 'save' command. The second is a zip file that contains the actual data. Most data files, except for very small ones, are zipped to save space. A smart browser should recognize that a zip file is binary and offer to save it to disk when you click on it.

In most cases, the zip files that contain data will have been created on a personal computer. Therefore, the ASCII files they contain will have both carriage returns and linefeeds. If such a file is unzipped on a Unix system, you must use the -a option of the unzip command in order to remove the unneeded carriage returns. In a few cases, the file may have been created on a Unix system, and DOS users will then have to add carriage returns; many editors can do this automatically.

We believe that the Journal of Applied Econometrics is the first economics journal to make data available via the World Wide Web. Statistics on WWW accesses to the archive are available by clicking in the appropriate place on the JAE Data Archive home page. These statistics suggest that the service has been remarkably popular.

Instructions for authors submitting data sets can be obtained by clicking in the appropriate place on the JAE Data Archive home page, or by sending electronic mail to the maintainer of the archive, James MacKinnon. His electronic mail address is [email protected].

? 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 5: Back Matter

Stay ahead of the field with Wiley ....

U

H ealth Economics publishes articles on all aspects of health economics: theoretical contributions, empirical studies, economic evaluations and analyses of health

policy from the economic perspective. Health economics is increasingly important to professionals in all areas of the health services and health care industry. This journal provides these professionals with an international forum for the presentation and discussion of new ideas in the latest implications of health policy.

Each issue contains topical papers on all issues of health economics, including: * The determinants of health and its definition and valuation * The planning and market mechanisms for achieving

0

equilibrium The evaluation of individual procedures and treatments The evaluation of health care systems in terms of efficiency

* Student corner * Editorials and personal views on a wide range of issues

related to health economics * Book reviews * Health Economics Letters

INDEXED OR ABSTRACTED IN

* Current Contents - Social and Behavioural Sciences (ISI) * Social Sciences Citation Index (ISI) * Research Alert (ISI) * Index Medicus

* ASSIA: Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts

* Hospital and Health Administration Index

.. HEALTH

ECONOMICS * .* * * U * * * * *

* U * *U. q WILEY,*K&_

EDITORS

Alan Maynard University of York, UK

John Hutton MEDTAP International Inc. London, UK

SUBSCRIPTION DETAILS

Volume 7 1998 6 issues Institutional Rate: $445.00o Personal Rate: $150o.0

All prices include postage pking and air-speeded delivery (Personal subscriptions must be paid : for out of private funds and mailed to | a home address)

....................................... ........ff

i:

, 1 .

I:I~~LIYI:13=FM

mmmbOmrl

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 6: Back Matter

A A

Emerging Strategies for Derivatives Professionals Implementing Derivatives Models Les Clewlow and Chris Strickland The single source of sound numerical techniques for modelling, pricing and hedging complex options, this book is of vital assistance to all practitioners and financial academics who need to implement models, examine their behaviour, perform comparisons with existing models and carry out empirical estimations. 0471 966517 Hbk 250pp ?45.00

Interest-Rate Option Models Second Edition Riccardo Rebonato

'... This book provides an excellent summary of the state of knowledge of term structure modelling.'

- Alan White and John Hull, A-J Financial Systems Canada

0471 966517 Hbk 250pp ?45.00

is and Pricing

Recognising that credit derivatives have emerged as an area of significant financial interest, this book offers full coverage of all major credit derivative structures. It also provides an excellent overview of this rapidly developing market, featuring individual contributions from many leading international banks.

0471 248568 Hbk 350pp ?65.00

Dynamic Hedging Managing Vanilla and Exotic Options Nassim Taleb

'Interesting, provocative, well-written.

Each chapter is worth a fortune to any... derivatives trader.'

- Victor Niederhoffer

Derivatives Handbook Risk Management and Control Edited by Robert J. Schwartz and Clifford Smith An authoritative guide to practical risk management techniques for derivatives offers the best, most cur- rent thinking on derivatives, brought to you by an all-star roster of analysts, institutional investors and academics.

0471 157651 Hbk 664pp ?55.00

Derivatives Demystified Using Structured Financial Products John C. Braddock

Fine, state-of-the-art instruction for understanding and using structured securities. Gives full descrip- tions of the most favoured structured securities, showing their comparative risk levels, disclosure requirements and customer suitability provisions.

0471 146331 Hbk 306pp ?50.00

0471 152803 Hbk 528pp ?60.00

Post your order to: Louise Holden, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Baffins Lane, CHICHESTER, West Sussex, P019 1 UD Phone your order on: UK: 0800 243407 Europe: (+1243) 843206 Fax your order on: (01243) 770677 E-mail: [email protected] please include your postal delivery address WILEY

Credit Derivatives Products, Application Satyajit Das

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 7: Back Matter

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS, VOL. 13, 97 (1998)

ELECTRONIC SUBMISSION OF ABSTRACTS

INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS

To speed up the review process, authors wishing to submit articles to the Journal of Applied Econometrics can now send their abstracts in advance via E-mail to the Editorial Office. Please follow the procedure below:

1. E-mails must be sent only to the Editorial Office in Cambridge at the following address: gsl 1 econ.cam.ac.uk

2. Your E-mail must contain the following details of the submission:

Title Author names Author affiliations Abstract References

No word limit will apply to initial abstracts submitted by E-mail. Published abstracts, however, will be limited to 100 words (see Notes for Contributors Clause 9).

3. Please submit in plain text within the body of the E-mail, not as file attachments, which are not suitable for our process and cannot be used.

4. An Editor will be assigned to each submission and will be responsible for the article until an Editorial Decision is reached.

5. The Editorial Office will advise by E-mail the name and contact details of the Editor assigned.

6. The author will be instructed to submit three hard copies of the manuscript to the assigned Editor plus one hard copy of the manuscript to the Editorial Office in Cambridge. (n.b: some Editors may accept electronic submission of whole manuscripts. Your assigned Editor's preference will be advised to you by the Editorial Office.)

7. All correspondence relating to your submission after an Editor has been assigned should be directed to that Editor and not to the Editorial Office.

Regular submission of manuscripts via the normal procedure outlined in our Notes for Contributors are welcomed and are unaffected by this new system

Editorial Office: Department of Applied Economics University of Cambridge Sidgwick Avenue Cambridge CB3 9DE UK

Tel: +44 1223 335291 Fax: +44 1223 335471 E-mail: gsl 11 @econ.cam.ac.uk

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 8: Back Matter

(JJOHN WILEY & SONS LIMITED WILEY COPYRIGHT TRANSFER AGREEMENT

To enable John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. to publish and disseminate the author's work to the fullest extent, the transfer to Wiley of the copyright in the work needs to be explicitly stated. This Agreement must therefore be signed and returned to us before we can process your manuscript.

The undersigned author has submitted a manuscript entitled

(the 'Work') for publication in

(the 'Journal') published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

A. The author transfers to John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. (the 'Publisher') during the full term of copyright, the exclusive rights comprised in the copyright of the Work, including but not limited to the right to publish the Work and the material contained therein throughout the world, in all languages, and in all media of expression now known or later developed, and to license or permit others to do so.

B. Notwithstanding the above, the author retains all proprietary rights other than copyright, such as patent rights.

C. The Publisher grants back to the author the following: 1. The right to make copies of all or part of the Work for the author's use in classroom teaching. 2. The right to use, after publication, all or part of the Work in a book by the author, or a collection of

the author's work. 3. The right to make copies of the Work for internal distribution within the institution which employs

the author. 4. The right to use figures and tables from the Work, and up to 250 words of text, for any purpose. 5. The right to make oral presentations of material from the Work.

The author agrees that all copies made under any of the above conditions will include a notice of copyright and a citation to the Journal.

D. In the case of a Work prepared under U.S. Government contract, the U.S. Government may reproduce, royalty-free, all or portions of the Work and may authorize others to do so for official U.S. Government purposes only, if the U.S. Government contract so requires. A copy of the contract must be attached.

E. If the Work was written as a work made for hire in the course of employment, the Work is owned by the company/employer which must sign this Agreement in the space provided below. In such case, the Publisher hereby licenses back to such employer the right to use the Work internally or for promotional purposes only.

F. The author represents that the Work is the author's original work. If the Work was prepared jointly, the author agrees to inform the co-authors of the terms of this Agreement and to obtain their permission to sign on their behalf. The Work is submitted only to this Journal, and has not been published before. (If excerpts from copyrighted works are included, the author will obtain written permission from the copyright owners and show credit to the sources in the Work). The author also represents that, to the best of his or her knowledge, the Work contains no libellous or unlawful statements, does not infringe on the rights of others, or contain material or instructions that might cause harm or injury.

Tick one:

EI Author's own work Author's signature and date

O U.S. Government work Typed or printed name

O Work made for hire for Employer Institution or company (Employer)

Note to U.S. Government Employees A Work prepared by a U.S. federal government employee as part of his/her official duties is called a 'U.S. Government work', and is in the public domain in the United States; in such case, Paragraph A above applies only outside the United States. Please attach a copy of any applicable policy of the author's agency. If the Work was prepared jointly, and any co-author is not a U.S. government employee, it is not a U.S. Government work. That co-author should be delegated by the co-authors to sign this Agreement. If the Work was not prepared as part of the employee's duties, it is not a U.S. Government work.

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 9: Back Matter

in Finance

Cutting-Edge Topics for Institutional Investors

Beyond Value at Risk The New Science of Risk Management

Professor Kevin Dowd

This is a comprehensive guide to recent developments and existing approaches to VaR and risk management, going beyond tra- ditional approaches to the subject and offer- ing a new, far-reaching perspective on invest- ment, hedging and portfolio decision-mak- ing. The key to this distinctive approach is a new decision rule - the 'Generalised Sharpe Rule' and its practical applications.

0471976210 Hbk 250pp ?45.00 0471976229 Pbk 250pp ?22.50

The New Financial Instruments Second Edition Julian Walmsley

The most basic of financial instruments are trading tools such as stocks, bonds and options. This book explains these fundamen- tals and clarifies the dizzying proliferation of more complicated new financial innovations and techniques. This second edition of The New Financial Instruments offers a compre- hensive overview, completely updated with the very latest techniques and technological developments.

0471 121363 Hbk 464pp ?40.00

Options, Futures and Exotic Derivative Assets

Eric C. Briys, Mondher Bellalah, Huu Mai Minh and Francois de Varenne

'It is both a textbook and a reference book. It covers the basics of the theory as well as the techniques for valuation of many of the more exotic derivatives. What is more, however, it is written with a deep understanding of the economics of finance... not only a compendi- um of existing results, but a methodology for deriving new ones.'

- Oldrich Alfons Vasicek

0471969095 Hbk 360pp ?45.00 0471969087 Pbk 360pp ?24.99

Investment Management

Peter L. Bernstein

State-of-the-art coverage of invetsment prin- ciples and applications aimed at the profes- sional with no solid financial background, produced by an all-star team of contributing experts and headed by best-selling business author Peter Bernstein. Designed as a do-it- yourself reference of MBA-level investment principles, the book provides everything one needs to know without the time and expense of an MBA programme.

0471 197165 Hbk 478pp ?39.95 .0471 197157 Pbk 478pp ?27.50

Post your order to: Louise Holden, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Baffins Lane, CHICHESTER, West Sussex, P019 1 UD Phone your order on: UK: 0800 243407 Europe: (+1243) 843206 Fax your order on: (01243) 770677 E-mail: [email protected] please include your postal delivery address WILEY

raema

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 10: Back Matter

intelligent investment

THE BEAR BOOK

John Rothchild "A slew of books tell you how to profit on the upside of the stock 0 . : The Art ofInvesting market, but The Bear Book is unique. It gives you tools to han- ? . , ., o ,~.,~ ~ ~~ , . ~Steven L. Mintz, Dana Dakin and Thomas Willison die the down side. Read it and you'll become a more effective investorh " sd.Raitayo'lbcmamrefciv Delivering the timeless principles of investing from which

anyone can profit, Beyond Wall Street showcases interviews eter ync with living financial legends, the superstars of finance, focus-

0471197181 Hbk f17.99 ing on the investment process as told by those who get it right. Includes sections on Gary Brinson, John Neff, Barr

It Was A Vry GQFld Year Rosenberg, Peter Bernstein and many others.

Martin S. Fridson 0471 247375 Hbk ?19.99

Every so often a financial market takes off beyond anyone's expectations, providing investors with an exceptional average return of 35% or more in a single year. It's the stock market one C F O year, then bonds or real estate the next. This book is the first seri- ous attempt to explain why certain investments have skyrocketed ARCHITECT OF THE at different times, in order to help investors spot similar trends in CORPORATION S FUTURE the future. CORPORATIONS FUTURE

0471 174009 Hbk ?19.99 Price Waterhouse Financial and Cost Management Team

"A smart look at what it takes for the CFO to succeed as a

T'~ ~ ~ .i:-:S''4The 3B:, - 'change leader. This book tells how to shift gear and mind- euro lCe Clir UW1 tJ <?itset to build shareholder value.

Edited by Paul Temperton0 0471975990 Hbk ?19.99

".. for the reader who is keen to find out more awt ^

development of the single currency, The Euro will make matters considerably easier."

- Keiron Root, The Investor

0471 979554 Hbk ?24.95

Post your order to: Louise Holden, John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Baffins Lane, CHICHE Phone your order on: UK: 0800 243407 Europe: (+1243) 84320 Fax your order on: (01243) 770677 E-mail: [email protected] please include your postal delivery address WI EY TV A 6l- I

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 11: Back Matter

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMETRICS

NOTES FOR CONTRIBUTORS 1. Four copies of each manuscript should be submitted to:

Professor M. Hashem Pesaran Faculty of Economics and Politics, University of Cambridge, Sidgwick Avenue, Cambridge, CB3 9DD, U.K.

2. To speed up the review process, authors can submit articles electronically. This is a two-stage process: in the first instance, title, author names, author affiliations, article abstract and references of the article should be sent via email to the Editorial Office at gslll(econ.cam.ac.uk. An editor will be assigned and instructions given on submission of the whole manuscript direct to the assigned editor. Full details of this procedure will be published in the Journal from time to time, or may be obtained via email on request from the Editorial Office. 3. Only original papers will be accepted, and copyright in published papers will be vested in the publisher. Papers are accepted for review only on the condition that they are not under review by another journal. Papers of special interest delivered at conferences may be accepted if copyright has not been previously surrendered. Copyright laws require that the transfer of copyright from authors to publisher must be explicit to enable the publisher to ensure maximum dissemination of the author's work. A copy of the Copyright Transfer Agreement to be used for the Journal of Applied Econometrics is reproduced in each volume. Additional copies are available from the journal editors or from the publishers, or contributors may photocopy the agreement from this journal. A copy of this agreement signed by the author, must accompany every article submitted for publication. 4. The language of the journal is English. 5. Twenty-five offprints of each paper will be provided free of charge. Additional copies may be purchased on an offprint order form which will accompany the proofs. 6. Proofs will be sent to authors so they can correct printers errors only. 7. Manuscripts should be typed double-spaced with wide margins, on one side of the paper only and submitted in quadruplicate. Illustrations should be submitted with the manuscript on separate sheets. There is no maximum length for contributions, but authors should write concisely. 8. The title should be brief, typed on a separate sheet and the author's name should be typed on the line below the title; the affiliation and address should follow on the next line. In the case of co-authors, respective addresses and affiliations should be clearly indicated. Authors should also give telephone, fax and electronic mail contact details. Correspondence, proofs and offprints will be sent to the first- named author, unless otherwise indicated. 9. The body of the manuscript should be preceded by a Summary (maximum length 100 words) which should be a summary of the entire paper, not of the conclusions alone. The summary will appear at the head of the article when published. 10. The paper should be reasonably subdivided into sections and, if necessary, subsections. 11. Mathematical symbols should be typewritten. Greek letters and unusual symbols should be identified separately in the margin. Distinction should be made between capital and lower case letters; between the letter 0 and zero; between the letter 1, the number one and prime; between k and kappa. Superscripts and subscripts should be displayed clearly above and below the line respectively. All equations should be numbered consecutively, and the numbers should be placed in parentheses in the right hand margin. 12. Half-tone illustrations are to be restricted in number to the minimum necessary. Good, glossy bromide prints should accompany the manuscripts and should not be attached to manuscript pages. Photographs should be enlarged sufficiently to permit clear reproduc- tion in half-tone after reduction. If words or numbers are to appear on a photograph two prints should be sent, the lettering being clearly indicated on one print only. All should be clearly identified on the back with the figure number and author's name.

Colour illustrations will be accepted if the Editor considers them necessary and if the costs are borne by the author(s). 13. Line drawings should be supplied on a separate sheet at the same size as the intended printed version (so no enlargement or reduction is required), maximum width 140 mm. Lettering on the artwork should be set in 8pt type. Computer-generated artwork must be submitted as laser printed output at a resolution of 600 dots per inch on high quality

paper. Dot matrix printer output is unacceptable. Tints are to be avoided; hatching should be used instead. Drawn artwork should be carefully lettered and drawn in black ink. Provide copies as well as the originals, all of which should be clearly identified on the back with the figure number and the author's name.

Artwork on disk is preferred on 3.5 inch PC or Macintosh format disk in a dedicated drawing package, such as Adobe Illustrator/Corel Draw/Macromedia Freehand not presentation, spreadsheet or database packages. Each graphic should be in a separate file, should conform to the information above and be supplied as a source (original) file as well as .EPS file, if different. Provide a hard copy print out of each figure, clearly identified. 14. Figure legends should be typed on a separate sheet and placed at the end of the manuscript. The amount of lettering on a drawing should be reduced as far as possible by transferring it to the legend. 15. Provision of Final Accepted Manuscripts on Disk. If authors wish to supply their accepted paper on disk, then the following guidelines should be observed: In addition to the hard copy print out, please supply two disks containing the final, accepted version of your paper to the Editor. The disks should be clearly labelled with the title of the paper, author names, date, hardware type, software package used and the file name. An example of the file name would be JAEMHP-the first three letters represent the Wiley journal code and the next three letters the first named author's initials (if an author only has two initials the middle letter should be X). The preferred medium is a 3.5 or 5.25 inch disk for PC (MS-DOS or Windows) or Macintosh. Our preference is for WordPerfect, Word or TeX (and/or one of its derivatives). If the disk and the hard copy print out differ, the hard copy will be treated as the definitive version. Disks which are not accompanied by a hard copy cannot be accepted. 16. It is the author's responsibility to obtain written permission to quote material which has appeared in another publication. 17. Tables should be numbered consecutively and titled. All table columns should have an explanatory heading. Tables should not repeat data which are available elsewhere in the paper, e.g. in a line diagram. 18. References to published literature should be quoted in the text by giving the author's name, year of publication, and, where needed for a quote, the page number, e.g. Stone (1954, p. 511). References should be listed alphabetically in a section labelled 'References' at the end of the paper. Journal references should be arranged thus, giving journal titles in full:

Mellander, E., A. Vredin and A. Warne (1992), 'Stochastic trends and economic fluctuations in a small open economy', Journal of Applied Econometrics, 7, 369-394.

Book references should be given as follows: Amemiya, T. (1985), Advanced Econometrics, Blackwell, Oxford. Hansen, B. E. (1993), 'The likelihood ratio test under non- standard conditions: testing the Markov switching model of GNP', in M. H. Pesaran and S. M. Potter (eds.), Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos and Econometrics, Wiley, Chichester.

19. No manuscript or figures will be returned following publication unless a request for return is made when the manuscript is originally submitted. 20. The publisher will do everything possible to ensure prompt publication. It will therefore be appreciated if manuscripts and illustrations conform from the outset to the style of the journal. Corrected proofs must be returned to the publishers within ten days to minimize the risk of the author's contribution having to be held over to a later issue. 21. Authors will be expected to make available a complete set of data used as well as any specialized computer programs employed, preferably in a machine-readable form. In cases where there are restrictions on the dissemination of the data the responsibility of obtaining the required permission to use the data rests with the interested investigator and not with the author. The condition of making available the specialized computer programs can be met either by providing a program listing or by allowing other investigators to use the program on an installation to which public access is possible. Authors of accepted papers are expected to deposit their data in electronic form onto the journal's data archive. Copies of the Guidelines for Users of the Journal of Applied Econometrics Data Archive can be obtained from the journal editors or the publishers. The Guidelines will also be published in the journal from time to time.

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 12: Back Matter

Journal of Volume 13 Number 4 July-August 1998

CONTENTS

An Empirical Application of Stochastic Volatility Models R. J. Mahieu and P. C. Schotman 333

Robustness Tests of the Augmented Solow Model J. R. W. Temple 361

An Analysis of Technology, Productivity, and Regulatory Distortion in the Interstate Natural Gas Transmission Industry: 1977-1985 R. C. Sickles and M. L. Streitwieser 377

The Age Profile of Mobility Measures: an Application to Earnings in West Germany M. M. Trede 397

Software Review Review of PcGive Professional 9.0 for Windows J. Marquez 411

Book Review Helmut Liitkepohl: 'Handbook of Matrices' D. Turkington 421

Forthcoming Papers 425

Journal of Applied Econometrics Data Archive: Information for Users 427

Electronic Submission of Abstracts: Instructions for Authors 429

0883-7252(199807/08)13:4;1 -H

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 23:16:37 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions


Recommended