Ken's PhDs
This page lists the names of all the completed PhDs I have supervised, mostly as sole supervisor, in five cases jointly with colleagues. The year of award of the degree, the thesis title, and subsequent affiliation are also included.
London School of Economics
Denise R. Osborn (1976), Time series analysis and dynamic specification in econometric models, with an application to the Australian wool market; University of Manchester
Richard T. Baillie (1978), Prediction errors in time series models and dynamic econometric models; Michigan State University
University of Warwick
John G. Halikias (1980), An econometric analysis of the foreign trade of Greece; Athens University of Economics and Business
John D. Whitley (1983), Incomes policy in the U.K. 1960-79: modelling and analysis; Bank of England (retired)
Andrew J. Snell (1984), Policy evaluation and design in the light of rational expectations; University of Edinburgh
Alastair R. Hall (1985), Estimation and inference in simultaneous equation models; University of Manchester
Gordon C. R. Kemp (1987), Asymptotic expansion approximations and the distributions of various test statistics in dynamic econometric models; University of Essex
Graham Romp (1988), Rational dynamic disequilibrium macro models with wage, price and inventory adjustment; Birmingham City University
Christopher J. Williams (1990), Exchange rates, expectations and international trade: theory and evidence; US Congressional Budget Office
Paul G. Fisher (1990), Simulation and control techniques for nonlinear rational expectation models; Bank of England (retired)
Marcelo S. Portugal (1992), Brazilian foreign trade: fixed and time varying parameter models; Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
Giovanni Amisano (1995), Bayesian inference on non-stationary data; Universita di Brescia/European Central Bank/Federal Reserve Board
Philip Epstein (1995), The reality and myth of business cycles: the nature and representation of short-run economic fluctuations; London School of Economics (retired)
K. Costas Milas (1997), Modelling employment policy, competitiveness and demand for traded and non-traded goods in a small open economy: the case of Greece; University of Liverpool
W. Stuart A. Fraser (1997), An analysis of long memory vector time series; Warwick Business School
Sushanta K. Mallick (1998), Modelling macroeconomic adjustment with growth in developing economies: the case of India; Queen Mary, University of London
Silvia Sgherri (2000), Policy evaluation with macroeconometric models; International Monetary Fund
Ana B. C. Galvão (2001), Non-linearities in macroeconomics: evaluation of non-linear time series models; Warwick Business School
Italian Doctoral Programme, Universities of Naples and Cagliari
Gianna Boero (1987), Structural econometric models versus VAR models: a comparison of two methodologies; University of Warwick