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Details about Gabriel Talmain

E-mail:
Homepage:http://www.gla.ac.uk/departments/economics/ourstaff/professorgabrieltalmain/
Phone:+44 141 330 5062
Postal address:Gabriel Talmain Department of Economics, University of Glasgow, Galsgow, G12 8RT, U.K.
Workplace:Department of Economics, University of Glasgow, (more information at EDIRC)

Access statistics for papers by Gabriel Talmain.

Last updated 2008-06-07. Update your information in the RePEc Author Service.

Short-id: pta18


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Working Papers

1999

  1. Aggregation and persistence in a macromodel
    Working Papers, Department of Economics at the School of Economics and Management (ISEG), Technical University of Lisbon.

1996

  1. Redistribution and Growth; Pareto Improvements
    UBC Departmental Archives, UBC Department of Economics View citations

1995

  1. Exact and Approximate Solutions to the Problem of Precautionary Savings
    UBC Departmental Archives, UBC Department of Economics
    Also in Discussion Papers, University at Albany, SUNY, Department of Economics (1994)

1993

  1. Currency Substitution, the Current Account, and Trends in the Exchange Rates: A General Equilibrium Approach
    Discussion Papers, University at Albany, SUNY, Department of Economics
  2. Domestic and International Scale Efects of R&D Effort
    Discussion Papers, University at Albany, SUNY, Department of Economics
  3. Pareto Improving Redistribution in a Growing Economy
    Discussion Papers, University at Albany, SUNY, Department of Economics

1990

  1. Non-Parametric Search
    Discussion Papers, University at Albany, SUNY, Department of Economics

Undated

  1. Aggregation, Persistence and Volatility in a Macromodel
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York View citations
  2. An Analytical Approximate Solution to the Problem of Precautionary Savings
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York Downloads View citations
  3. Depreciation Rates and Capital Stocks
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York Downloads View citations
  4. Endogenous Fertility, Endogenous Growth and Public Pension System: Should We Switch from a PAYG to a Fully-Funded System?
    Discussion Papers, Department of Economics, University of York Downloads View citations

Journal Articles

 
 
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