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How Elastic is the Demand for Labor? A Comment

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1983 65(4), 692
Ashar, V. G., and T. D. Wallace, A Sampling Study of Minimum Absolute Deviations Estimators, Operations Research 11 (1963), 747-758. Blattberg, Robert, and Thomas Sargent, with Non-Gaussian Disturbances-Some Sampling Results, Econometrica 39 (1971), 501-510. Chambers, John M., Cohn L. Mallows, and B. W. Stuck, A Method for Simulating Random Variables, Journal of the American Statistical Association 71 (1976), 340-344. Du Mouchel, William H., Stable Distributions and Infinite Variance Models in Statistics, Technical Report No. 16, Department of Mathematics, M.I.T. (1981). Ekblom, Hikan, Lp-Methods for Robust Regression, Doctoral thesis, University of Lund (1974). Feller, William, An Introduction to Probability Theory and Its Applications (New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1966). Kadiyala, K. R., and K. S. R. Murthy, of Regression Equations with Cauchy Disturbances, The Canadian Journal of Statistics Section C: Applications 5 (1) (1977), 111-120. Nyquist, Hans, On LI-norm Estimation of Linear Models with Serially Correlated Distributed Residuals, Statistical Research Report 1979-14, University of Umea (1979). . , Recent Studies on LPn-norm Estimation, Doctoral thesis, University of Umea (1980). Oberhofer, W., and Jan Kmenta, A General Procedure for Obtaining Maximum Likelihood Estimates in Generalized Regression Models, Econometrica 42 (1974), 579-590. Pearson, E. S., Ralph B. D'Agostino, and K. 0. Bowman, Tests for Departure for Normality: Comparison of Powers, Biometrika 64 (1977), 231-246. Smith, V. Kerry, and Thomas W. Hall, A Comparison of Maximum Likelihood Versus BLUE Estimators, this REVIEW 54 (May 1972), 186-190.

Educational Attainment and Cohort Size

Journal of Labor Economics 1988 6(3), 330-361
"We argue that the postwar baby boom [in the United States] caused substantial fluctuations in both the economic rewards to education and educational attainment over the last 3 decades. If substitutability between young and old workers diminishes with education, the present value of lifetime earnings for a boom cohort is depressed more for highly educated workers, reducing incentives for educational attainment. The opposite is true for pre- and postboom cohorts. The diminishing substitutability hypothesis explains the declines in both the returns to college and college completion rates in the 1970s and predicts a substantial increase in educational attainment for postboomers."

Censored Normal Regression with Measurement Error on the Dependent Variable

Econometrica 1984 52(3), 737
When zero mean measurement error is added to the dependent variable for the nonlimit observations of the censored normal regression model, the conventional maximum likelihood estimator (Tobit) is inconsistent. Correct maximum likelihood estimation appears to be computationally difficult under various specifications for the distribution of the measurement error. Estimators based on either the expectation function or the conditional expectation function for uncensored observations remain consistent in the presence of measurement error. Eight such estimators are examined. The results of a numerical experiment suggest that several of these estimators are substantially more efficient than the conventional maximum likelihood estimator when measurement error exists and that they also will do reasonably well when it does not.