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 Updated May, 1 2008 147.392 documents processed, 3.154.300 references and 1.403.701 citations

 

 
 

Department of Economics, University of Bristol, UK / Bristol Economics Discussion Papers

Raw citation data, Impact Factor, Immediacy Index, Published documents, Citations received, , Most cited papers , Latest citations and documents published in this series in EconPapers.

Raw data:
IF AIF DOC CIT D2Y C2Y SC(%) CiY II AII
19960.160000.07
19970.170000.09
19980.190000.12
19990.290000.19
20000.390000.2
20010.340000.18
20020.397100020.290.2
20030.710.411422754010.070.21
20040.240.471142154020.180.25
20050.120.451215253020.170.29
 
 
IF: Impact Factor: C2Y / D2Y
AIF: Average Impact Factor for series in RePEc in year y
DOC: Number of documents published in year y
CIT: Number of citations to the series in year y
D2Y: Number of articles published in y-1 plus y-2
C2Y: Cites in y to articles published in y-1 plus y-2
SC(%): Percentage of selft citations in y to articles published in y-1 plus y-2
CiY: Cites in year y to documents published in year y
IdI: Immediacy Index: CiY / Documents.
 
AII: Average Immediacy Index for series in RePEc in year y
 
Impact Factor:
 
Immediacy Index:
 
Documents published:
 
Citations received:
 

 

Most cited documents in this series:

(1) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/553 Child Farm Labor: The Wealth Paradox (2003).
Cited: 7 times.

(2) RePEc:bri:uobdis:05/575 Does external trade promote financial development? (2005).
Cited: 6 times.

(3) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/554 Is Child Work Necessary? (2003).
Cited: 5 times.

(4) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/552 Sibling Death Clustering in India: Genuine Scarring vs Unobserved Heterogeneity (2003).
Cited: 5 times.

(5) RePEc:bri:uobdis:02/542 An Assessment of the New Economy (2002).
Cited: 5 times.

(6) RePEc:bri:uobdis:05/574 Dual economy models: a primer for growth economists. (2005).
Cited: 4 times.

(7) RePEc:bri:uobdis:06/581 Growth and labour markets in developing countries (2006).
Cited: 3 times.

(8) RePEc:bri:uobdis:07/595 The Weak Instrument Problem of the System GMM Estimator in Dynamic Panel Data Models (2007).
Cited: 2 times.

(9) RePEc:bri:uobdis:05/572 Worker Flows, Job Flows and Unemployment in a Matching Model (2005).
Cited: 2 times.

(10) RePEc:bri:uobdis:05/578 Will political liberalisation bring about financial development? (2005).
Cited: 2 times.

(11) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/555 Measuring trend output: how useful are the Great Ratios? (2003).
Cited: 2 times.

(12) RePEc:bri:uobdis:02/532 The Costs of Dualism (2002).
Cited: 2 times.

(13) RePEc:bri:uobdis:02/531 Wage Inequality in a Dual Economy (2002).
Cited: 1 times.

(14) RePEc:bri:uobdis:06/584 Macroeconomic policy and the distribution of growth rates (2006).
Cited: 1 times.

(15) RePEc:bri:uobdis:04/562 Early Childhood Investments in Human Capital: Parental Resources and Preferences (2004).
Cited: 1 times.

(16) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/545 Structural Breaks and Permanent Trends (2003).
Cited: 1 times.

(17) RePEc:bri:uobdis:04/558 Inequality in Infant Survival Rates in India: Identification of State-Dependence Effects (2004).
Cited: 1 times.

(18) RePEc:bri:uobdis:02/540 Organizational Design, Technology and the Boundaries of the Firm (2002).
Cited: 1 times.

(19) RePEc:bri:uobdis:06/590 Convergence behaviour in exogenous growth models (2006).
Cited: 1 times.

(20) RePEc:bri:uobdis:04/565 When Does Patent Protection Stimulate Innovation? (2004).
Cited: 1 times.

(21) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/546 The Impact of Age Distribution Variables on the Long Run Consumption Function (2003).
Cited: 1 times.

(22) RePEc:bri:uobdis:06/583 Explaining policy volatility in developing countries (2006).
Cited: 1 times.

(23) RePEc:bri:uobdis:04/561 Parent Altruism, Cash Transfers and Child Poverty (2004).
Cited: 1 times.

(24) RePEc:bri:uobdis:05/579 Total Factor Productivity: An Unobserved Components Approach (2005).
Cited: 1 times.

(25) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/556 Euro-illusion: a natural experiment. (2003).
Cited: 1 times.

(26) RePEc:bri:uobdis:02/533 Optimally Rational Expectations and Macroeconomics (2002).
Cited: 1 times.

Latest citations received in: | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002

Latest citations received in: 2005

(1) RePEc:bri:uobdis:05/573 The Cyclical Behavior of Equilibrium Unemployment and Vacancies – A Comment (2005). Department of Economics, University of Bristol, UK / Bristol Economics Discussion Papers

(2) RePEc:bri:uobdis:05/578 Will political liberalisation bring about financial development? (2005). Department of Economics, University of Bristol, UK / Bristol Economics Discussion Papers

Latest citations received in: 2004

(1) RePEc:bri:uobdis:04/562 Early Childhood Investments in Human Capital: Parental Resources and Preferences (2004). Department of Economics, University of Bristol, UK / Bristol Economics Discussion Papers

(2) RePEc:bri:uobdis:04/566 Patent Protection As A Stimulant for Risky Innovation. Could TRIPS be Counterproductive? (2004). Department of Economics, University of Bristol, UK / Bristol Economics Discussion Papers

Latest citations received in: 2003

(1) RePEc:bri:uobdis:03/555 Measuring trend output: how useful are the Great Ratios? (2003). Department of Economics, University of Bristol, UK / Bristol Economics Discussion Papers

Latest citations received in: 2002

(1) RePEc:nip:nipewp:6/2002 Monetary Policy, Investment and Non-Fundamental Shocks (2002). NIPE - Universidade do Minho / NIPE Working Papers

(2) RePEc:oxf:wpaper:130 Macroeconomic Performance in the Bretton Woods Era, And After (2002). University of Oxford, Department of Economics / Economics Series Working Papers

Warning!! This is still an experimental service. The results of this service should be interpreted with care, especially in research assessment exercises. The processing of documents is automatic. There still are errors and omissions in the identification of references. We are working to improve the software to increase the accuracy of the results.

Source data used to compute the impact factor of RePEc series.

©2008 Jose Manuel Barrueco | mail: barrueco@uv.es