Omay, TolgaEmirmahmutoglu, FurkanGupta, RanganMiller, Stephen M.Omay, TolgaEconomics2024-07-052024-07-05202060307-33781467-858610.1111/boer.122092-s2.0-85067844635https://doi.org/10.1111/boer.12209https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14411/3497Emirmahmutoglu, Furkan/0000-0001-7358-3567; Omay, Tolga/0000-0003-0263-2258; Miller, Stephen/0000-0002-6754-0605This paper re-examines the stochastic properties of U.S. state real per capita personal income, using new panel unit-root procedures. The new developments incorporate non-linearity, asymmetry, and cross-sectional correlation within panel-data estimation. Including nonlinearity and asymmetry finds that 43 states exhibit stationary real per capita personal income whereas including only nonlinearity produces 42 states that exhibit stationarity. Stated differently, we find that two states exhibit nonstationary real per capita personal income when considering nonlinearity, asymmetry, and cross-sectional dependence.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessasymmetrycross-sectional dependencenonlinearpanel unit rootsieve bootstrapC12C15C23Is real per capita state personal income stationary? New nonlinear, asymmetric panel-data evidenceArticleQ47215062WOS:000509416800004