Label
Yeldan, Erinç, 1960-
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Dynamics of macroeconomic adjustment in a globalized developing economy (Turkey)
- Dynamics of macroeconomic adjustment in a globalized developing economy, growth, accumulation and distribution, Turkey 1969-1998 inter-temporal CGE model
- Handbook of green economics, edited by Sevil Acar, Erinç Yeldan
- Dynamics of growth, accumulation and distribution in the post-1980 Turkish economy, a Kaldorian general equilibrium interpretation
- Measuring exchange rate misalignment
- Strategic policies and growth, an applied model of R&D driven endogenous growth
- Patterns of productivity growth and the wage cycle in Turkish manufacturing
- Beyond inflation targeting, assessing the impacts and policy alternatives, edited by Gerald A. Epstein, A. Erinç Yeldan
- A simple dynamic applied general equilibrium model of a small open economy, transitional dynamics and trade policy
- Fiscal debt management, accumulation and transitional dynamics in a CGE model for Turkey
- How prescribed policy can mislead when data are defective, a follow-up to Srinivasan (1994) using general equilibrium
- Challenges and choices in post-crisis East-Asia, simulations of investment policy reform in an intertemporal, global model
- Dynamics of macroeconomic disequilibrium and inflation in Turkey, the state, politics and the markets under a globalized developing economy
- The end of the developmental state?, a general equilibrium investigation on the sources of the Asian crisis within a multi-region, inter-temporal CGE model
- An R&D model of endogenous growth, calibration, steady state and transition path equilibria
- The rural economy under structural adjustment and financial liberalization, results of a macro-integrated agricultural sector model for Turkey
- Interface of trade liberalization, accumulation and growth in a world of multi-polar trade blocs, lessons from a multi-regional global general equilibrium model
- On Turkey's trade policy, is a customs union with Europe enough
- How prescribed policy can mislead when data are defective, a follow-up to Srinivasan (1994) using general equilibrium