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Trends, Random Walks and Persistence: An Empirical Study of Disaggregated U.S. Industrial Production

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1992 74(1), 154 open access
Unit-root and variance-ratio tests are used to ex- amine the trend properties and degree of persistence of industrial production in U.S. industries and comparable aggregates during the post World War II period. The evidence from unit-root tests suggests that less than one-half of these industries have output which may be characterized as a random walk. The variance-ratio test results generally support this conclusion. Consistent with standard economic theory, fluctuations in durable-goods industries are less persistent than in nondurable goods industries. Finally, tests find relatively greater persistence in the aggregate industrial production data.

Bias of s 2 in the Linear Regression Model With Correlated Errors

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1992 74(2), 362
The authors consider the relative bias of the OLS-based estimate s(squared) of the disturbance variance in the linear regression model when disturbances are stationary AR(1). They improve upon previous bounds for the bias and show that E(s[squared]/[sigma squared]) tends to zero as autocorrelation increases whenever there is an intercept in the regression. Copyright 1992 by MIT Press.

Testing Dynamic Specification of Factor Demand Equations for U.S. Manufacturing

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1992 74(2), 240
This paper addresses the question of dynamic specification of empirical models of factor demand for annual U.S. manufacturing data from 1947 to 1981. Frequently used models that treat a subset of factors as variable are shown to be misspecified. An error-correction model is considered as an alternative specification. This model is shown to dominate several more parsimonious models in several respects. However, like the other models considered, the error-correction model is unable to generate satisfactory estimates of long-run elasticities. The issue of dynamic specification remains unresolved. Copyright 1992 by MIT Press.

A Simultaneous Equations Model of Coffee Brand Pricing and Advertising

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1992 74(1), 54
This paper explores the relationship between a differentiated brand's market share and its price in the context of a model that recognizes the endogeneity of the brand's advertising behavior and pricing decisions. The empirical analysis suggests that General Foods charged higher prices for its regular-grind Maxwell House coffee in geographic areas where the brand's market share was relatively large. Available cross-sectional, time-series data and company documents suggest that this empirical relationship is attributable to the preference grocery retailers have for putting dominant coffee brands on special, rather than cross-sectional variations in costs, market concentration, or consumer tastes. Copyright 1992 by MIT Press.

Optimal Designs of Discrete Response Experiments in Contingent Valuation Studies

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1992 74(3), 559
Optimal designs for estimating model parameters and other characteristics such as mean and median willingness-to-pay are discussed.when a logistic or a probit regression model is used for analyzing a contingent valuation study with discrete questions. A numerical example, related to a study of the value of preserving some virgin forests in Sweden, illustrates the efficiencies of different designs and how a sequential procedure can be applied. Copyright 1992 by MIT Press.

Aggregation, Distribution and Dynamics in the Linear and Quadratic Expenditure Systems

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1992 74(1), 45
Using Canadian data (1965-86), the author confirms and extends Thomas M. Stoker's (1986) results on the rule of distributional effects in demand systems. The confirmation consists of evidence from the linear expenditure system model showing that distributional effects are statistically significant and can displace AR(1) dynamics in the disturbances. The extension is made to the quadratic expenditure system model and an argument is advanced that standard habit formation dynamics may reflect omitted distributional effects. The evidence supports this conjecture. This suggests that the author may have been drawing the wrong conclusions from expenditure studies. Rather than inferring dynamic behavior, he should have been concluding that these models are misspecified. Copyright 1992 by MIT Press.

Is Public Spending Determined by Voter Choice of Fiscal Capacity?

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1992 74(3), 522
Previous models of public spending fail to explain why high inflation rates are distributed non-randomly across countries. In the switching-regime specification proposed here, governments tend to resort to inflationary debt monetarization when the spending level chosen by voters exceeds actual revenue capacity. The voter-choice and fiscal-capacity models of earlier studies are special cases of this framework. Using cross country data for 1970, 1975 and 1980, the authors find that the voter-choice specification applies to most industrialized countries, whereas fiscal capacity appears to constrain government spending in most developing countries. High inflation appears to result from shocks that alter a country's fiscal capacity relative to voters' expectations. Copyright 1992 by MIT Press.