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The Et Interview: Professor Albert Rex Bergstrom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 October 2010

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988 

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References

THE PUBLICATIONS OF ALBERT REX BERGSTROM

1. The construction and use of economic models. London: English Universities Press, 1967; also published as Selected economic models and their analysis. New York: American Elsevier, 1967; also translated into Japanese.Google Scholar
2. Statistical inference in continuous-time economic models (edited). Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Company, 1976.Google Scholar
3. Stability and inflation: essays in memory of A. W., Phillips (edited with Catt, A. J. L., Peston, M. H., Silverstone, B. D. J.). New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1978.Google Scholar
1. The guaranteed price for dairy products. Economic Record 25 (1949): 9197.10.1111/j.1475-4932.1949.tb02099.xGoogle Scholar
2. New Zealand's export supply function. Economic Record 27 (1951): 2129.10.1111/j.1475-4932.1951.tb02834.xGoogle Scholar
3. Report of the taxation committee-New Zealand 1951. Economic Record 28 (1952): 8890.10.1111/j.1475-4932.1952.tb03037.xGoogle Scholar
4. An econometric study of supply and demand for New Zealand's exports. Econometrica 23 (1955): 258276.10.2307/1910383Google Scholar
5. The use of the index number in demand analysis. Review of Economic Studies 23 (1956): 1726.Google Scholar
6. A reply to Mr. Kemp. Review of Economic Studies 24 (1957): 215.10.2307/2296073Google Scholar
7. The New Zealand economy, 1957–1958. Economic Record, 24 (1958): 306316.Google Scholar
8. Linear programming, import controls, and the exchange rate where the supply of exports is inelastic. Economic Record 26 (1960): 385392.Google Scholar
9. The exact sampling distributions of least squares and maximum likelihood estimators of the marginal propensity to consume. Econometrica (1962): 480490.Google Scholar
10. A model of technical progress, the production function and cyclical growth. Economica 29 (1962): 357370.10.2307/2551385Google Scholar
11. An econometric model of the New Zealand economy (with Brownlie, A.D.). Economic Record 41 (1965): 125126.Google Scholar
12. Nonrecursive models as discrete approximations to systems of stochastic differential equations. Econometrica 34 (1966): 173182.10.2307/1909861Google Scholar
13. Monetary phenomena and economic growth: A synthesis of neoclassical and Keynesian theories. Economic Studies Quarterly 17 (1966): 18.Google Scholar
14. What is econometrics? The University of Auckland Gazette 8 (1966): 13.Google Scholar
15. Mathematical restatement of the profit guidance problem (with Zauberman, A.). In: Zauberman, A. (ed.), Aspects of Planometrics. London: Athlone Press, 1967.Google Scholar
16. Monetary and fiscal policy in a growing economy. New Zealand Economic Papers 10 (1967): 3139.Google Scholar
17. Forecasting the New Zealand economy (with Brownlie, A. D.). Economic Record 43 (1967): 303305.Google Scholar
18. The covariance matrix of the limited information maximum likelihood estimator. Econometrica 40 (1972): 899900.10.2307/1912076Google Scholar
19. A model of disequilibrium neoclassical growth and its application to the United Kingdom (with Wymer, C. R.). In: Bergstrom, A. R. (ed.), Statistical Inference in Continuous-Time Economic Models. Amsterdam: North Holland Publishing Company, 1976.Google Scholar
20. Monetary policy in a model of the United Kingdom. In: Bergstrom, A. R. et al. (eds.), Stability and Inflation. New York: Wiley, 1978.Google Scholar
21. Gaussian estimation of structural parameters in higher-order continuous-time dynamic models. Econometrica 51 (1983): 117152.10.2307/1912251Google Scholar
22. Continuous-time stochastic models and issues of aggregation over time. In: Griliches, Z. & Intriligator, M. D. (eds.), Handbook of Econometrics, Vol. 2. Amsterdam: North Holland Publishing Company, 1984.Google Scholar
23. Monetary fiscal and exchange rate policy in a continuous-time econometric model of the United Kingdom. In: Malgrange, P. & Muet, P. (eds.), Contemporary Macroeconomic Modelling. London: Blackwell, 1984.Google Scholar
24. The estimation of nonparametric functions in a Hilbert space. Econometric Theory 1 (1985): 726.10.1017/S0266466600010975Google Scholar
25. The estimation of parameters in nonstationary higher-order continuous-time dynamic models. Econometric Theory 1 (1985): 369386.10.1017/S0266466600011269Google Scholar
26. The estimation of open higher-order continuous-time dynamic models with mixed stock and flow data. Econometric Theory 2 (1986): 350373.10.1017/S026646660001166XGoogle Scholar
27. Optimal control in wide-sense stationary continuous-time stochastic models. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 11 (1987): 425443.10.1016/S0165-1889(87)80016-7Google Scholar