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Daniel E. Sichel

Daniel E. Sichel

D-Index & Metrics

Economics and Finance

D-Index
42
Citations
22374
World Ranking
1993
National Ranking
1156

Overview

Daniel E. Sichel is affiliated with Wellesley College in the United States. Their research primarily concentrates in the fields of economics, econometrics, and finance, with a particular focus on several subfields including economics and econometrics, general economics, marketing, media technology, and strategy and management.

The scientist's work covers a range of main topics, comprising:

  • Consumer Market Behavior and Pricing
  • ICT Impact and Policies
  • Digital Platforms and Economics
  • Innovation Policy and R&D
  • Economic Growth and Productivity
  • Monetary Policy and Economic Impact
  • Economics of Agriculture and Food Markets

Publication venues where Daniel E. Sichel has frequently contributed include:

  • SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Review of Income and Wealth
  • The Journal of Economic Perspectives

Among recent papers authored by Sichel are:

  • The Price of Nails Since 1695: A Window into Economic Change, 2021, SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Household Innovation and R&D: Bigger than You Think, 2020, Review of Income and Wealth
  • The Price of Nails Since 1695: A Window into Economic Change, 2022, The Journal of Economic Perspectives
  • Intangibles: How Far We Have Come and The Road Ahead, 2024, Review of Income and Wealth

Coauthorship is an aspect of Sichel's scholarly output, with frequent collaborators including:

  • Ana Aizcorbe
  • David Byrne
  • David Wasshausen
  • Francis X. Diebold
  • Glenn D. Rudebusch

Best Publications

  • The resurgence of growth in the late 1990s: is information technology the story?

    Stephen D. Oliner;Daniel E. Sichel

  • The Resurgence of Growth in the Late 1990s: Is Information Technology the Story?

    Stephen D. Oliner;Daniel E. Sichel

  • The Resurgence of Growth in the Late 1990s: Is Information Technology the Story?

    Unknown

  • Information technology and productivity: where are we now and where are we going?

    Stephen D. Oliner;Daniel E. Sichel

  • Measuring Capital and Technology: An Expanded Framework

    Carol Corrado;Carol Corrado;Charles Hulten;Charles Hulten;Daniel Sichel;Daniel Sichel

  • Measuring Capital and Technology: An Expanded Framework

    Carol Corrado;Carol Corrado;Charles R. Hulten;Charles R. Hulten;Daniel Sichel;Daniel Sichel

  • Intangible Capital and Economic Growth

    Carol Corrado;Charles R. Hulten;Daniel Sichel

  • INTANGIBLE CAPITAL AND U.S. ECONOMIC GROWTH

    Carol Corrado;Charles Hulten;Daniel Sichel

  • Business Cycle Asymmetry: A Deeper Look

    Daniel E. Sichel

  • Computers and Output Growth Revisited: How Big is the Puzzle?

    Stephen D. Oliner;Daniel E. Sichel;Jack E. Triplett;Robert J. Gordon

  • The demand for money

    Stephen M. Goldfeld;Daniel Sichel

  • Intangible Capital and Economic Growth

    Carol A. Corrado;Carol A. Corrado;Charles R. Hulten;Charles R. Hulten;Daniel E. Sichel;Daniel E. Sichel

  • Information technology and productivity: where are we now and where are we going?

    Stephen Oliner;Daniel Sichel

  • Information technology and productivity: where are we now and where are we going?

    Stephen D. Oliner;Daniel E. Sichel

  • Explaining a productive decade

    Stephen D. Oliner;Daniel E. Sichel;Kevin J. Stiroh

  • The Computer Revolution: An Economic Perspective

    Daniel E. Sichel;Marilyn Whitmore

  • Can financial innovation help to explain the reduced volatility of economic activity

    Karen E. Dynan;Douglas W. Elmendorf;Daniel E. Sichel

  • Inventories and the Three Phases of the Business Cycle

    Daniel E. Sichel

  • Measuring Capital and Technology

    Unknown

  • Measuring Capital in the New Economy

    Carol Corrado;John Haltiwanger;Daniel Sichel

  • The evolution of household income volatility

    Karen E. Dynan;Douglas Elmendorf;Daniel Sichel

  • Business Cycle Duration Dependence : A Parametric Approach

    Daniel E. Sichel

  • New and Old Models of Business Investment: A Comparison of Forecasting Performance

    Stephen Oliner;Glenn Rudebusch;Daniel Sichel

  • Chapter 8 The demand for money

    Stephen M. Goldfeld;Daniel E. Sichel

  • Are Business Cycles Asymmetric? A Correction.

    Daniel E. Sichel

  • Further evidence on business cycle duration dependence

    Francis X. Diebold;Glenn D. Rudebusch;Daniel E. Sichel

  • Cyclical Patterns in the Variance of Economic Activity

    Mark W. French;Daniel E. Sichel

Frequent Co-Authors

Charles R. Hulten
Charles R. Hulten University of Maryland, College Park
Glenn D. Rudebusch
Glenn D. Rudebusch Brookings Institution
John Haltiwanger
John Haltiwanger University of Maryland, College Park
Jonathan Haskel
Jonathan Haskel Imperial College London
Javier Miranda
Javier Miranda Halle Institute for Economic Research
Francis X. Diebold
Francis X. Diebold University of Pennsylvania
Lee Branstetter
Lee Branstetter Carnegie Mellon University
Jack E. Triplett
Jack E. Triplett Brookings Institution
Robert J. Gordon
Robert J. Gordon Northwestern University

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