National Institute Economic Review
1959 - 2023
Continuation of National Institute Economic Review.
From National Institute of Economic and Social Research
Cambridge University Press, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS UK.
Contact information at EDIRC.
Bibliographic data for series maintained by Kirk Stebbing ().
Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
Volume 239, month February, 2017
- Economic Policy and Surveillance in Europe: Introduction pp. R1-R2

- Simon Kirby
- Fiscal and Other Rules in EU Economic Governance: Helpful, Largely Irrelevant or Unenforceable? pp. R3-R13

- Iain Begg
- Does the Structural Budget Balance Guide Fiscal Policy Pro-Cyclically? Evidence from the Finnish Great Depression of the 1990s pp. R14-R31

- Tero Kuusi
- Analysing the Relevance of the MIP Scoreboard's Indicators pp. R32-R52

- Domonkos Tomáš, Ostrihoň Filip, Šikulová Ivana and Mária Širaňová
- A Public Investment Stimulus in Surplus Countries and Its Spillovers in the EA pp. R53-R62

- Jan in't Veld
Volume 238, month November, 2016
- UK and Europe: What Next? Introduction pp. R1-R3

- Jagjit Chadha
- Hard or Soft? The Politics of Brexit pp. R4-R12

- Anand Menon and Brigid Fowler
- Immigration after Brexit pp. R13-R21

- Jonathan Portes
- Negotiating the UK's Post-Brexit Trade Arrangements pp. R22-R30

- Peter Holmes, Jim Rollo and L. Winters
- Assessing the Impact of Trade Agreements on Trade pp. R31-R42

- Monique Ebell
- The UK and EU Foreign, Security and Defence Policy after Brexit: Integrated, Associated or Detached? pp. R43-R50

- Richard G. Whitman
Volume 237, month August, 2016
- The Future of Pensions: Reforms and their Consequences – Introduction pp. R1-R5

- Alexander Danzer, Richard Disney, Peter Dolton and Chiara Rosazza Bondibene
- The Referendum Blues: shocking the system pp. F4-F8

- Jagjit Chadha
- Pension reform in the United Kingdom: an economic perspective pp. R6-R12

- Richard Disney
- One pillar crumbling, the others too short: old-age provision in Germany pp. R13-R21

- Martin Werding
- Linking retirement age to life expectancy in a Bismarckian system – the case of Germany pp. R22-R29

- Valentin Vogt and Jörg Althammer
- Workplace pensions and remuneration in the public and private sectors in the UK pp. R30-R37

- Jonathan Cribb and Carl Emmerson
- Who wins? Evaluating the impact of UK public sector pension scheme reforms pp. R38-R46

- Alexander Danzer, Peter Dolton and Chiara Rosazza Bondibene
- The effect of the reforms to compulsion on annuity demand pp. R47-R54

- Edmund Cannon, Ian Tonks and Rob Yuille
- Variable annuities and aggregate mortality risk pp. R55-R61

- Martin Weale and Justin van de Ven
Volume 236, month May, 2016
- The economic consequences of leaving the EU pp. 2-6

- Angus Armstrong and Jonathan Portes
- Britain's influence in the EU pp. 7-13

- Anand Menon and John-Paul Salter
- Immigration, free movement and the EU referendum pp. 14-22

- Jonathan Portes
- Free movement of services, migration and leaving the EU pp. 23-30

- Catherine Barnard and Amy Ludlow
- EU membership, financial services and stability pp. 31-38

- Angus Armstrong
- The EU budget and UK contribution pp. 39-47

- Iain Begg
Volume 235, month February, 2016
- Financial Regulation: Are We Reaching an Efficient Outcome? pp. R1-R3

- Angus Armstrong and E Davis
- Commentary: UK Housing Market: Problems and Policies pp. F4-F8

- Angus Armstrong
- The Missed Opportunity and Challenge of Capital Regulation pp. R4-R14

- Anat R. Admati
- Regulatory Failure and Regulatory Change in the Banking Sector pp. R15-R17

- David Miles
- Liquidity Regulation: Rationales, Benefits and Costs pp. R18-R26

- Gianni De Nicolò
- Too Big to Fail and Too Big to Save: Dilemmas for Banking Reform pp. R27-R39

- James Barth and Clas Wihlborg
- Regulatory Cooperation on Cross-Border Banking – Progress and Challenges After the Crisis pp. R40-R49

- Thorsten Beck
- Macroprudential Supervision: From Theory to Policy pp. R50-R62

- Dirk Schoenmaker and Peter Wierts
Volume 234, month November, 2015
- Unconventional Monetary Policy: Introduction pp. R1-R4

- Angus Armstrong and Monique Ebell
- Commentary: Modernising Economic Statistics: Why It Matters pp. F4-F7

- Diane Coyle
- Negative Interest Rate Policy as Conventional Monetary Policy pp. R5-R14

- Miles Kimball
- Quantity Theory of Money Redux? Will Inflation be the Legacy of Quantitative Easing? pp. R15-R26

- William Cline
- The New Art of Central Banking pp. R27-R39

- Jagjit Chadha
- The Transmission of Unconventional Monetary Policy in UK Government Debt Markets pp. R40-R47

- Jack Meaning and James Warren
Volume 233, month August, 2015
- The Economics of UK Constitutional Change: Introduction pp. R1-R4

- Angus Armstrong and Monique Ebell
- The government's fiscal strategy pp. F4-F9

- Jonathan Portes
- Devolving funding and taxation in the UK: a unique challenge pp. R5-R13

- Tony Travers
- City deals, decentralisation and the governance of local infrastructure funding and financing in the UK pp. R14-R26

- Peter O'Brien and Andy Pike
- The economic case for further fiscal decentralisation to Scotland: theoretical and empirical perspectives pp. R27-R36

- David Bell and David Eiser
- The unintended consequence of English votes for English laws pp. R37-R44

- Angus Armstrong and Monique Ebell
Volume 232, month May, 2015
- Sports Economics: It May be Fun but What's the Point? pp. R1-R3

- Alex Bryson, Bernd Frick and Rob Simmons
- UK finance and Europe pp. F4-F9

- Angus Armstrong
- Transfer spending in the English premier league: the haves and the have nots pp. R4-R17

- Richard Burdekin and Michael Franklin
- Benefits to their communities from small town professional football clubs pp. R18-R29

- Andy Barlow and David Forrest
- Rank-order tournaments, probability of winning and investing in talent: evidence from champions' league qualifying rules pp. R30-R40

- Colin Green, Fernando Lozano and Rob Simmons
- Born in the USA: national origin effects on time allocation in US and Spanish professional basketball pp. R41-R50

- David J. Berri, Christian Deutscher and Arturo Galletti
- Participation in school sport and post-school pathways: evidence from ireland pp. R51-R66

- Pete Lunn and Elish Kelly