The purpose of the Bulletin of Economics and Meta-Analysis (BEMA) is to provide a forum for recent meta-analyses in economics, to publish fresh research quickly, and thereby to improve the quality of meta-analytic research before it is submitted to traditional scholarly journals. We seek to publish, electronically, short notes and longer abstracts that briefly sketch recent research about meta-analysis or that employs meta-analysis. It is assumed that all notes submitted will contain links to longer working papers. Authors wishing to have their notes considered for publication in BEMA should submit them for review to: Stanley@黑料不打烊.edu.
FDI
and productivity gains in developing countries: How to make sense of an
inconclusive debate? Binyam Afewerk Demena and Peter A.G. van Bergeijk.
Supplemental Appendix Tables:
Limitations of PET-PEESE and other meta-analysis methods. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2017. T.D. Stanley.
Protocol for testing the McKinon-Shaw hypothesis on sub-Saharan
Africa: A meta-analysis of the evidence.听
Anande Semwenda听听听听 Protocol
Exchange rate uncertainty and export performance:听What meta-analysis reveals?听Jamal Bouoiyour and Refk Selmi
Abstract听
Does the UK Minimum Wage Reduce Employment? A Meta-Regression Analysis. Megan de Linde Leonard, T.D. Stanley, and Hristos Doucouliagos.听 Abstract听 Paper
Estimating the price elasticity of beer: Meta-analysis of data with heterogeneity, dependence, and publication bias. Jon P. Nelson
Micro-Credit and Income: A Literature Review and Meta-analysis. MaiaYang and T.D. Stanley
What is the impact of labour market regulation on employment in LICs?
S. Nataraj, F. Perez-Arce, S. Srinivasan and K.B. Kumar
Which Foreigners are Worth Wooing? A Meta-Analysis of Vertical Spillovers from FDI.
Tomas Havranek and Zuzana Irsova Abstract
Renminbi misaligned? Results from meta-regressions.
Iikka Korhonen and Maria Ritola. Abstract
Re-visiting the health care luxury good hypothesis: Aggregation, precision, and publication bias?
Joan Costa-Font, Marin Gemmill and Gloria Rubert. Abstract
Explaining development aid allocation by growth: A meta study.
Hristos Doucouliagos and Martin Paldam.
Abstract
The Use (and Abuse) of Meta-Analysis in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics: An Assessment.
Jon P. Nelson and Peter E. Kennedy. Abstract
Meta-Regression Methods for Publication Selection Bias: Simulations and Heckman Regression.
T.D. Stanley. Abstract
A meta-analysis of development aid allocation: The effects of income level and population size.
Hristos Doucouliagos and Martin Paldam. Abstract
Are recreation values systematically underestimated? Reducing publication selection bias for benefit transfer.
T. D. Stanley and Randall S. Rosenberger. Abstract
Contributions must be 500 words or less, include the internet link to a more complete working paper, and contain the author's e-mail address