Table of Contents

This page contains abstracts and articles of past editions of the Review. Access to abstracts is open to all readers. Full text access is restricted to subscribers only.

Volume 73: Issue 3, July 2006

1. Are Chinese Cities Too Small?.
CHUN-CHUNG AU, Brown University.
J. VERNON HENDERSON, Brown University.

AbstractArticle

2. Executive Compensation and Short-Termist Behaviour in Speculative Markets.
PATRICK BOLTON, Columbia University and NBER.
JOSE SCHEINKMAN, Princeton University and NBER.
WEI XIONG, Princeton University and NBER.

AbstractArticle

3. On the Nature of Capital Adjustment Costs.
RUSSELL W. COOPER, University of Texas at Austin.
JOHN C. HALTIWANGER, University of Maryland.

AbstractArticle

4. Semi-Parametric Comparison of Stochastic Volatility Models using Realized Measures.
VALENTINA CORRADI, Queen Mary, University of London.
WALTER DISTASO, Imperial College London.

AbstractArticle

5. Words, Deeds, and Lies: Strategic Behaviour in Games with Multiple Signals.
JOHN DUFFY, University of Pittsburgh.
NICK FELTOVICH, University of Houston.

AbstractArticle

6. Contracting with Diversely Naive Agents.
KFIR ELIAZ, New York University.
RAN SPIEGLER, School of Economics, Tel Aviv University.

AbstractArticle

7. The Elusive Gains from International Financial Integration.
PIERRE-OLIVIER GOURINCHAS, University of California, Berkeley, NBER, and CEPR.
OLIVIER JEANNE, International Monetary Fund and CEPR.

AbstractArticle

8. Optimal Redistributive Taxation in a Search Equilibrium Model.
MATHIAS HUNGERBÜHLER, University of Namur.
ETIENNE LEHMANN, ERMES, Universite Catholique de Louvain, and IZA.
ALEXIS PARMENTIER, Universite Catholique de Louvain, EUREQua, and ERMES.
BRUNO VAN DER LINDEN, Universite Catholique de Louvain, FNRS, IZA, and ERMES.

AbstractArticle

9. Does Auctioning of Entry Licences Induce Collusion? An Experimental Study.
THEO OFFERMAN, University of Amsterdam.
JAN POTTERS, Tilburg University.

AbstractArticle

10. Inattentive Producers.
RICARDO REIS, Princeton University, NBER, and CEPR.

AbstractArticle

11. Information Markets and the Comovement of Asset Prices.
LAURA L. VELDKAMP, Stern School of Business, New York University.

AbstractArticle