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  Updated February, 7 2012 333.516 documents processed, 7.301.907 references and 2.961.463 citations

 

 
 

Economics Working Paper Archive

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

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Raw data:
IF AIF DOC CIT D2Y C2Y SC(%) CiY II AII
19960.18131360010.080.09
19970.460.188126136020.250.09
19980.380.214110218020.140.12
19990.450.2672222101010.140.16
20000.380.3617188218020.120.17
20010.580.352316624147.1130.570.17
20020.850.41811340345.950.280.19
20031.10.41516941454.4110.730.2
20040.910.441054333013.320.20.22
20051.480.4612146253713.52420.27
20061.770.4859222395.140.80.24
20072.290.45171739020.40.2
200830.491410306.710.110.2
20090.710.36931410100.21
 
 
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:jhu:papers:371 Buffer-Stock Saving and the Life Cycle/Permanent Income Hypothesis (1996).
Cited: 131 times.

(2) RePEc:jhu:papers:521 A Bayesian Look at New Open Economy Macroeconomics (2005).
Cited: 92 times.

(3) RePEc:jhu:papers:379 An Analysis of Sample Attrition in Panel Data: The Michigan Panel Study of income Dynamics (1998).
Cited: 86 times.

(4) RePEc:jhu:papers:475 The NAIRU in Theory and Practice (2002).
Cited: 82 times.

(5) RePEc:jhu:papers:387 Comparison Utility in a Growth Model (1997).
Cited: 63 times.

(6) RePEc:jhu:papers:435 Near-Rationality and Inflation in Two Monetary Regimes (2000).
Cited: 58 times.

(7) RePEc:jhu:papers:450 Productivity Growth and the Phillips Curve (2001).
Cited: 55 times.

(8) RePEc:jhu:papers:535 How Large Is the Housing Wealth Effect? A New Approach (2006).
Cited: 51 times.

(9) RePEc:jhu:papers:504 The (Ir)relevance of Real Wage Rigidity in the New Keynesian Model with Search Frictions (2003).
Cited: 46 times.

(10) RePEc:jhu:papers:414 Taxation and the Labor Supply - Decisions of the Affluent (2000).
Cited: 43 times.

(11) RePEc:jhu:papers:430 Portfolios of the Rich (2000).
Cited: 38 times.

(12) RePEc:jhu:papers:505 Do Central Banks Respond to Exchange Rate Movements? A Structural Investigation (2003).
Cited: 37 times.

(13) RePEc:jhu:papers:421 Solving Consumption Models with Multiplicative Habits (2000).
Cited: 29 times.

(14) RePEc:jhu:papers:462 The Epidemiology of Macroeconomic Expectations (2001).
Cited: 25 times.

(15) RePEc:jhu:papers:501 Nonparametric Tests for Common Values in First-Price Auctions (2003).
Cited: 22 times.

(16) RePEc:jhu:papers:381 On the Existence of Pure Strategy Equilibria in Games with a Continuum of Players (1997).
Cited: 20 times.

(17) RePEc:jhu:papers:491 Monetary Policy for Inattentive Economies (2003).
Cited: 18 times.

(18) RePEc:jhu:papers:527 Optimal Corporate Leniency Programs (2005).
Cited: 17 times.

(19) RePEc:jhu:papers:386 Unemployment Expectations Jumping (Ss) Triggers and Household Balance Sheets (1997).
Cited: 17 times.

(20) RePEc:jhu:papers:455 Liquidity Constraints and Precautionary Saving (2001).
Cited: 17 times.

(21) RePEc:jhu:papers:517 Theoretical Foundations of Buffer Stock Saving (2004).
Cited: 16 times.

(22) RePEc:jhu:papers:526 Detecting Cartels (2005).
Cited: 14 times.

(23) RePEc:jhu:papers:469 A Panic Attack on Unit Roots and Cointegration (2001).
Cited: 13 times.

(24) RePEc:jhu:papers:531 How Do Cartels Operate? (2006).
Cited: 13 times.

(25) RePEc:jhu:papers:530 Precautionary Saving and Precautionary Wealth (2006).
Cited: 13 times.

(26) RePEc:jhu:papers:416 Unemployment Risk and Precautionary Wealth: Evidence from Households Balance Sheets (1999).
Cited: 13 times.

(27) RePEc:jhu:papers:503 Nonlinear Pricing with Self-Control Preferences (2003).
Cited: 12 times.

(28) RePEc:jhu:papers:390 Death to the Log-Linearized Consumption euler Equation! (And Very Poor Health to the Second-Order Approximation) (1997).
Cited: 12 times.

(29) RePEc:jhu:papers:513 On-the-Job Search and the Cyclical Dynamics of the Labor Market (2004).
Cited: 11 times.

(30) RePEc:jhu:papers:500 An Inventory of Simple Monetary Policy Rules in a New Keynesian Macroeconomic Model (2003).
Cited: 11 times.

(31) RePEc:jhu:papers:478 Intergenerational Risk Sharing in the Spirit of Arrow Debreu and Rawls with Applications to Social Security Design (2001).
Cited: 10 times.

(32) RePEc:jhu:papers:482 Non-Cooperative Games with Many Players (2002).
Cited: 10 times.

(33) RePEc:jhu:papers:463 The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program (2001).
Cited: 8 times.

(34) RePEc:jhu:papers:399 A Stronger Measure of Risk Aversion and a General Characterization of Optimal Income Tax Enforcement (1998).
Cited: 8 times.

(35) RePEc:jhu:papers:520 The Method of Endogenous Gridpoints for Solving Dynamic Stochastic Optimization Problems (2005).
Cited: 8 times.

(36) RePEc:jhu:papers:534 Welfare Work Requirements with Paternalistic Government Preferences (2006).
Cited: 8 times.

(37) RePEc:jhu:papers:466 PPP May not Hold After all: A Further Investigation (2001).
Cited: 8 times.

(38) RePEc:jhu:papers:512 The Interest Rate Learning and Inventory Investment (2004).
Cited: 8 times.

(39) RePEc:jhu:papers:542 International Evidence On Sticky Consumption Growth (2008).
Cited: 8 times.

(40) RePEc:jhu:papers:532 Modelling the Birth and Death of Cartels with an Application to Evaluating Antitrust Policy (2006).
Cited: 7 times.

(41) RePEc:jhu:papers:480 Testing for Indeterminacy:An Application to U.S. Monetary Policy (2003).
Cited: 7 times.

(42) RePEc:jhu:papers:509 Collusion under Monitoring of Sales (2005).
Cited: 7 times.

(43) RePEc:jhu:papers:577 Information in (and not in) the term structure (2011).
Cited: 7 times.

(44) RePEc:jhu:papers:373 The Decline of Welfare Benefits in the US: The Role of Wage Inequality (1998).
Cited: 7 times.

(45) RePEc:jhu:papers:467 A New Look at Panel Testing of Stationarity and the PPP Hypothesis (2001).
Cited: 7 times.

(46) RePEc:jhu:papers:444 Individual Learning About Consumption (2001).
Cited: 7 times.

(47) RePEc:jhu:papers:388 Why Do the Rich Save So Much? (1997).
Cited: 7 times.

(48) RePEc:jhu:papers:497 Media as Watchdogs: The Role of News Media in Electoral Competition (2003).
Cited: 6 times.

(49) RePEc:jhu:papers:457 Estimating Taylor Rules in a Real Time Setting (2001).
Cited: 6 times.

(50) RePEc:jhu:papers:522 Do World Shocks Drive Domestic Business Cycles? Some Evidence from Structural Estimation (2005).
Cited: 6 times.

Recent citations received in: | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006

Recent citations received in: 2009

Recent citations received in: 2008

(1) RePEc:jhu:papers:546 Identifying Dynamic Games with Serially-Correlated Unobservables (2008). Economics Working Paper Archive

Recent citations received in: 2007

(1) RePEc:cfr:cefirw:w0095 Modeling Financial Return Dynamics by Decomposition (2007). Working Papers

(2) RePEc:ecb:ecbwps:20070811 Instability and nonlinearity in the Euro area Phillips curve. (2007). Working Paper Series

Recent citations received in: 2006

(1) RePEc:diw:diwwpp:dp596 International Wealth Effects (2006). Discussion Papers of DIW Berlin

(2) RePEc:hhs:lunewp:2006_021 Bargaining in Collusive Markets (2006). Working Papers

(3) RePEc:tky:fseres:2006cf448 The Degree of Precautionary Saving: A Reexamination (2006). CIRJE F-Series

(4) RePEc:zbw:bubdp1:5193 Precautionary saving and income uncertainty in Germany - new evidence from microdata (2006). Discussion Paper Series 1: Economic Studies

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.

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