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Steve Bond (economist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Steve Bond is a British economist at Nuffield College, Oxford, Oxford, specialising in applied microeconometrics, particularly the investment and financial behaviour of firms. Together with Manuel Arellano, he developed the Arellano–Bond estimator, a widely used generalized method of moments estimator for panel data. Research Papers in Economics lists the paper as the most cited article ever in economics.[1][2]

Publications

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  • Arellano, M. and Bond, S., 1991. Some tests of specification for panel data: Monte Carlo evidence and an application to employment equations. The review of economic studies, 58(2), pp. 277–297.
  • Blundell, R. and Bond, S., 1998. Initial conditions and moment restrictions in dynamic panel data models. Journal of econometrics, 87(1), pp. 115–143.
  • Bond, S., Hashemi, A., Kaplan, G., and Zoch, P., 2021. Some unpleasant markup arithmetic: Production function elasticities and their estimation from production data. Journal of Monetary Economics, 121, pp. 1–14.
  • Bloom, N., Bond, S. and Van Reenen, J., 2007. Uncertainty and investment dynamics. The review of economic studies, 74(2), pp. 391–415.
  • Bond, S. and Meghir, C., 1994. Dynamic investment models and the firm's financial policy. The Review of Economic Studies, 61(2), pp. 197–222.

References

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  1. ^ "Steve Bond named 2018 Citation Laureate". Nuffield College Oxford University. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  2. ^ "Steve Bond". Nuffield College Oxford University. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
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  • [1] at Nuffield College, University of Oxford
  • [2] at Department of Economics, University of Oxford