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Amy Jordan

Personal Details

First Name:Amy
Middle Name:
Last Name:Jordan
Suffix:
RePEc Short-ID:pjo337
[This author has chosen not to make the email address public]

Affiliation

Economic Research Department
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Dallas, Texas (United States)
http://www.dallasfed.org/research.cfm
RePEc:edi:efrbdus (more details at EDIRC)

Research output

as
Jump to: Working papers Articles

Working papers

  1. Jesus Cañas & Amy Jordan, 2018. "Texas Service Sector Outlook Survey: Survey Methodology and Performance," Working Papers 1807, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

Articles

  1. Amy Chapel & Kelsey Reichow, 2019. "Eleventh District Banks Have Performed Well Despite Rising Funding Costs, Nonbank Competition," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Second Qu, pages 11-15.
  2. Amy Jordan, 2017. "Texas Retail in the Doldrums; Brick-and-Mortar Stores Take the Brunt," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q3, pages 10-13.
  3. Alexander T. Abraham & Amy Jordan, 2017. "Spotlight: Rising Education Helps Explain Hispanic Household Income Growth in Texas," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q4, pages 18-18.
  4. Emily Gutierrez & Amy Jordan, 2016. "Once-robust wage growth stops as Texas economy slows," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q2, pages 10-13.
  5. Amy Jordan, 2015. "Snapshot: Texas growth conference series," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q2, pages 16-16.
  6. Amy Jordan & Melissa LoPalo & Edward Rodrigue, 2013. "Noteworthy: water, immigration, trade," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q3, pages 1-14.
  7. Amy Jordan & Michael D. Plante, 2013. "Getting prices right: addressing Mexico’s history of fuel subsidies," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q3, pages 10-13.
  8. Amy Jordan & Pia M. Orrenius, 2013. "Spotlight: firms expect health act to raise labor costs," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q3, pages 1-15.

Citations

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Working papers

    Sorry, no citations of working papers recorded.

Articles

  1. Amy Jordan & Michael D. Plante, 2013. "Getting prices right: addressing Mexico’s history of fuel subsidies," Southwest Economy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, issue Q3, pages 10-13.

    Cited by:

    1. Fullerton, Thomas M. & Jiménez, Alan A. & Walke, Adam G., 2015. "An econometric analysis of retail gasoline prices in a border metropolitan economy," The North American Journal of Economics and Finance, Elsevier, vol. 34(C), pages 450-461.
    2. Xian Liu & Barrett Kirwan & Andrea Martens, 2018. "Regulatory compliance, information disclosure and peer effects: evidence from the Mexican gasoline market," Journal of Regulatory Economics, Springer, vol. 54(1), pages 53-80, August.

More information

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Co-authorship network on CollEc

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