National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Price Elasticity of Water Demand: A Meta-Analysis
Thoma, Richard ; Havránek, Tomáš (advisor) ; Janotík, Tomáš (referee)
Meta-analysis is a statistical method that allows us to combine results of em- pirical research. A theoretical summary helped to select appropriate model for the empirical part of this thesis - a meta-analysis focused on the price elas- ticity of residential water demand. A mixed-effects multilevel model, which corrects for selection bias, heteroskedasticity and within-study correlation, was employed. Publication bias was found only for subsample excluding data from the western part of the United States. Heckman meta-regression shows that the true price elasticity of water demand is -0,246. Finally variation in results across studies is explained. Using average price instead of margi- nal, the discrete-continuous choice model and data from the western part of the United States for water demand modelling will result in higher values of estimated elasticity. 1
Understanding co-jumps in financial markets
Thoma, Richard ; Baruník, Jozef (advisor) ; Vošvrda, Miloslav (referee)
This thesis focuses on impact of jumps and simultaneous jumps (co-jumps) in asset prices on future volatility. Our main contribution to the empirical literature lies in the use of panel Heterogeneous Autoregressive (HAR) model that allows us to obtain average effect of jumps for both the portfolio of 29 U.S. stocks and 8 individual market sectors our stocks belong to. On top of that we investigate the effect of sign for both jumps and co-jumps. The estimation results indicate that the impact of jumps on future volatility is positive whereas for co-jumps it is negative. We also document tendency of downward jumps and co-jumps to be followed by increase in volatility and that upward jumps and co-jumps are followed by decrease in volatility. Finally, results for individual sectors reveal that estimated effects vary across industries - for cyclical sectors volatility is in general more sensitive to negative jumps and less sensitive to positive jumps than for defensive sectors.
Price Elasticity of Water Demand: A Meta-Analysis
Thoma, Richard ; Havránek, Tomáš (advisor) ; Janotík, Tomáš (referee)
Meta-analysis is a statistical method that allows us to combine results of em- pirical research. A theoretical summary helped to select appropriate model for the empirical part of this thesis - a meta-analysis focused on the price elas- ticity of residential water demand. A mixed-effects multilevel model, which corrects for selection bias, heteroskedasticity and within-study correlation, was employed. Publication bias was found only for subsample excluding data from the western part of the United States. Heckman meta-regression shows that the true price elasticity of water demand is -0,246. Finally variation in results across studies is explained. Using average price instead of margi- nal, the discrete-continuous choice model and data from the western part of the United States for water demand modelling will result in higher values of estimated elasticity. 1

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