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Manuel Arellano (born 19 June 1957) is a Spanish economist specialising ineconometrics and empiricalmicroeconomics. Together withStephen Bond, he developed theArellano–Bond estimator, a widely usedGMM estimator for panel data. This estimator is based on the earlier article by Arellano's PhD supervisor,John Denis Sargan, andAlok Bhargava (Bhargava and Sargan, 1983).RePEc lists the paper about the Arellano-Bond estimator as the most cited article in economics.[2]
Manuel Arellano earned his undergraduate degree atUniversidad de Barcelona in 1979. Later in 1982, he began graduate studies in Econometrics and Mathematical Economics atLondon School of Economics and completed a Ph.D. in economics in 1985.
After his graduation, he was employed as a research lecturer atUniversity of Oxford from 1985 to 1989 and had a research fellow atNuffield College, Oxford, from 1986 to 1989. From 1989 to 1992, he was a lecturer in economics at London School of Economics. From 1991 until now, he is a professor of Econometrics atCEMFI, Madrid.[1]
Some Tests of Specification for Panel Data: Monte Carlo Evidence and an Application of Employment Equations, Review of Economic Studies, Volume 58, Issue 2, pp. 277–297 (with S. Bond).
Panel Data Models: Some Recent Developments. Included in the book: J.J. Heckman and E. Leamer (eds.): Handbook of Econometrics, Volume 5, Chapter 53, North-Holland, 2001 (with B. Honoré).
Bhargava, A, and Sargan, JD. (1983), Estimating dynamic random effects models from panel data covering short time periods. Econometrica, 51, 1635–1659.