Blar i Norges Banks publikasjonsserier / Norges Bank publication series på emneord "panel data"
Viser treff 1-6 av 6
-
A European-Type Wage Equation from an American-Style Labor Market: Evidence from a Panel of Norwegian Manufacturing Industries in the 1930s
(Working Papers;4/2004, Working paper, 2004)Using a newly constructed panel of manufacturing industry data for interwar Norway, we estimate a long-run wage curve for the 1930s that has all the modern features of being homogeneous in prices, proportional to productivity, ... -
Banks’ Buffer Capital: How Important Is Risk?
(Working Papers;11/2003, Working paper, 2003)Most banks hold a capital to asset ratio well above the required minimum defined by the present capital adequacy regulation (Basel I). Using bank-level panel data from Norway, important hypotheses concerning the determination ... -
House Prices and Household Consumption
(Staff Memo;11/2017, Working paper, 2018)Neither standard economic theory nor empirical studies provide an unequivocal answer to the question of the effect of changes in house prices on household consumption. Estimating this effect empirically is demanding because ... -
Large T and Small N: A Three-Step Approach to the Identification of Cointegrating Relationships in Time Series Models with a Small Cross-Sectional Dimension
(Working Papers;15/2004, Working paper, 2004)This paper addresses cointegration in small cross-sectional panel data models. In addition to dealing with cointegrating relationships within the cross-sectional dimension, the paper explicitly addresses the issue of ... -
The Effect of New Technology in Payment Services on Banks' Intermediation
(Working Papers;6/2002, Working paper, 2002)In many countries, payment services in banking have shifted from paper-based giro and cheque payments to electronic giro and debit card payments. This paper analyses the effect of this change in payment technology within ... -
Unemployment. Labour Market Programmes and Wages in Norway
(Working Papers;11/1997, Working paper, 1997)The Norwegian authorities pursue active labour market policies to fight unemployment by qualifying the unemployed in a wide range of programmes. We discuss theoretically and investigate empirically the effects such policies ...