Abstract: This paper aims to examine whether a bubble is present in the housing market of China. Thus, we use the housing price-to-income ratios and housing price-to-rent ratios of 35 cities from 1998 to 2010. The methods of the panel KSS unit root test with a Fourier function and the SPSM process are likewise used. The panel KSS unit root test with a Fourier function considers the problem of non-linearity and structural changes, and the SPSM process can avoid the stationary time series from dominating the result-generated bias. Through a rigorous empirical study, we determine that the housing price-to-income ratios are stationary in 34 of the 35 cities in China. Only Xining is non-stationary. The housing price-to-rent ratios are stationary in 32 of the 35 cities in China. Chengdu, Fuzhou, and Zhengzhou are non-stationary. Overall, the housing bubbles are not a serious problem in China at the time.
Abstract: This study applies a simple and powerful nonlinear unit root test to test the validity of long-run purchasing power parity (PPP)
in a sample of 10 East-Asian countries (i.e., China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand) over the period of March 1985 to September 2008. The empirical results indicate that PPP holds true for half of these 10 East-Asian countries under study, and the adjustment toward PPP is found to be nonlinear and in an asymmetric way.
Abstract: This study applies the sequential panel selection
method (SPSM) procedure proposed by Chortareas and Kapetanios
(2009) to investigate the time-series properties of energy
consumption in 50 US states from 1963 to 2009. SPSM involves the
classification of the entire panel into a group of stationary series and
a group of non-stationary series to identify how many and which
series in the panel are stationary processes. Empirical results obtained
through SPSM with the panel KSS unit root test developed by Ucar
and Omay (2009) combined with a Fourier function indicate that
energy consumption in all the 50 US states are stationary. The results
of this study have important policy implications for the 50 US states.