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Application of a Threshold Regression Model to Household Purchases of Automobiles

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1975 57(3), 275
The threshold regression assumes that value of dependent variable remains fixed until the concerted action of independent variables and error term induces it to overcome its reaction threshold. The existence of reaction thresholds in purchasing of private cars has been discussed and analyzed. Among main explanatory variables used in micro-economic studies, most significant appear to be household composition, age and education of head, number of earners, number and age of cars, value of stock of cars previously held, liquid assets, net worth, debts and place of residence. The independent variables finally retained in present study are permanent income, education of head household and number of children. To summarize, income appears to be most important variable affecting car purchases by households. There are no doubt other social and demographic characteristics of households which bear on this phenomenon, but nature of these variables as well as mechanisms through which they operate have not been sufficiently investigated and are not yet sufficiently well known to permit us to detect their effect very clearly, in statistical investigations.

Dividend Policy: Informational Content or Partial Adjustment?

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1975 57(1), 65
IN making dividend decisions, the firm determines the division of earnings between reinvestment and distribution to stockholders. There are two general issues in the area of dividend policy: The first concerns the determinants of the firm's payout ratio (the ratio of dividends to earnings). The second issue concerns the intertemporal change of dividends. The focus of this paper is on the second issue. There are two prevailing views on the behavior of corporate dividend policies over time; the informational content and the partial adjustment hypothesis. In the following sections, both hypotheses are shown leading to empirically equivalent expressions. To avoid this confusion, we suggest an approach that would differentiate between the two hypotheses. Empirical results analyzing dividends behavior of twenty broad industry categories are summarized.

Determinants of Household Migration: A Comparative Study by Race and Poverty Level

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1975 57(3), 269
M IGRATION studies using aggregate data IYL have noted the importance of differences in economic opportunity between areas on migration flows (Greenwood, 1969; Bowles, 1970; Fabricant, 1970). Studies using survey data have provided a more detailed profile of the characteristics identifying migrants, but have not incorporated the effects of economic incentives as fully as aggregate studies. Both approaches have noted significant differences in migration behavior among race or age groups, but neither has generated results which can be readily generalized to other groups of interest such as the poor. Recent interest in anti-poverty policies and income maintenance programs directed toward the poor suggest the need for explicit analysis of this group. The objective of this study is to examine the effects of economic incentives on migration for households grouped first by race and then by poverty level. The data, covering annual observation periods 1968-1969 and 1969-1970, focuses on households headed by persons less than fortyfive years old who are in the labor force at the beginning of an observation period (Institute for Social Research, 1970). The model takes the basic form

Cyclical and Secular Income Elasticities of the Demand for Imports

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1975 57(3), 357
provide a criteria for rejecting the importance of substitution in ERP calculations. In addition, it is no less restrictive to assume a priori that all industries have the same value for a, whether it be 0.5, 2.0 or the traditional value of zero. It has been pointed out elsewhere that the realistic case to consider is what happens to the rankings when different industries have different values for a'.3 A meaningful approach would involve answering the question of what is the highest and lowest ranking an industry could obtain under any combination of different hypothetical values for o-. The data for the 135 industries in the investigation indicate that applying these criteria creates scope for the rank correlations to be somewhat less than the observed figures of 0.99, but the author's contention of a high correlation still stands. Nevertheless this result, while being interesting and useful, can however be misleading if applied as a general case. There is in fact considerable scope for variation in industry rankings when there is a wide disparity in the magnitude of the calculated ERP across the industries. This is the experience of some countries4 and it is also the case when, for a variety of practical purposes, industries are classified in smaller groups according to the intensity of their protection. For the group of highly protected industries, for example, there is traditionally a wide spread in the magnitude of the ERP and therefore considerable scope for variation in industry rankings. The result being that in the study under discussion for the 10 most highly protected industries there are 9 industries that could fill the top 4 positions and 7 industries that could fill the bottom 2 positions in the industry rankings.5

Legal "Cobwebs": A Recursive Model of the Market for New Lawyers

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1975 57(2), 171
THE market for new law school graduates has undergone considerable change in recent years, with starting salaries increasing rapidly following the enormous increase in rates of the major New York firms in 1968' and enrollments into law programs skyrocketing in the late 1960's. What explains these and earlier developments in the market for new lawyers? Does the influx of students reflect economically responsive supply behavior with respect to salary and other labor market incentives? What factors underly changes in the salaries of starting lawyers? This paper investigates these questions with a variant of the recursive model of the market for highly-trained workers originally used to analyze engineering shortages and surpluses (Freeman, 1971). Application of the model to a profession which differs substantially from engineering and related sciences but has a similar fixed time delay in producing new specialists provides a test of its general validity, as well as insight into the operation of the legal labor and education markets. This paper begins with a brief description of the empirical phenomenon under study -patterns of change in the number of law students, legal salaries, and activity in the profession. Section II develops a recursive cobweb-type model to explain these developments. Section III presents estimates of the supply and salary equations of the model. The final section examines the endogenous cyclic fluctuations in the market and summarizes the major findings.

Life-Cycle Effects on Corporate Returns on Retentions

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1975 57(4), 400
IN a recent paper investigating the efficiency of earnings retentions, Baumol, Heim, Malkiel and Quandt (1970) (hereafter BHMQ) estimate the rate of return on earnings retentions, debt and new equity for a large cross section of firms. They find new equity earns considerably higher returns than the ploughback of profit and depreciation, with the returns on new debt falling between. BHMQ do not explain these striking results, beyond suggesting a lack of market discipline on the reinvestment of internal funds. In their concluding remarks, they pose a number of open questions for future research and analysis

Residential Demand for Electric Energy

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1975 57(1), 12
A serious impediment to the design of appro,A-IL priate public policies with regard to the ''energy crisis is the lack of general agreement concerning the determinants of energy demand. This paper considers the determinants of residential demand for electric energy. The results indicate that the long-run own-price elasticity of demand is equal to at least unity, contrary to the common assumption that demand is not responsive to price.