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Testing Residuals from Least Squares Regression for Being Generated by the Gaussian Random Walk

Econometrica 1983 51(1), 153
This paper considers the null hypothesis that the errors on a regression equation form a random walk. By using the standard Durbin-Watson assumptions, we derive three test statistics that are uniformly most powerful against the alternative hypothesis that the errors are being generated by the stationary first order Markoff process. Unfortunately, the tabulated lower and upper bounds are too wide apart and so we compare the powers of the three tests using simulated as well as economic data. It is then recommended that the Imhof routine should be attached to standard regression programs to calculate the exact limit of the Berenblut-Webb statistic.

Equilibrium Trajectories of Economic Growth

Econometrica 1983 51(3), 693
THIS PAPER BELONGS to that part of economic dynamics of which the consumption turnpike theorems are typical results. However, rather than the usual formulation of the problem as a mathematical programming problem, we study it in the framework of dynamic equilibrium models which were first studied in [9]. In [9] we considered finite equilibrium trajectories for which the technology as well as demand functions were assumed constant in time. Here a more general model will be described. It permits changing technology and demand functions and pays more attention to the exploration of the asymptotic properties of infinite trajectories. We define the class of efficient equilibrium trajectories and prove that, under certain conditions, infinite trajectories in this class converge to each other. Finite trajectories (which are always efficient) may differ essentially from them only at the beginning and at the end of the planning period. For a stationary model a strong turnpike theorem follows from these considerations. It is shown that nonefficient equilibrium trajectories are characterized by fast growth of prices and high levels of production. At the same time, the consumption, as a rule, goes to zero. Here we present conditions which imply the uniqueness of efficient trajectories and the absence of nonefficient ones. For the special case in which the equilibrium model is equivalent to an optimization model, efficient equilibrium trajectories are strongly optimal.

Individual Monotonicity and Lexigraphic Maxmin Solution

Econometrica 1983 51(5), 1603
[In the axiomatic theory of n-person bargaining, we show that there is a unique solution possessing properties: efficiency, symmetry, invariance under utility transformations, independence of irrelevant alternatives other than ideal point, and individual monotonicity on comparable domains. The solution obtained both extends and modifies the solution characterized by Kalai and Smorodinsky which is also known as Raiffa's solution, and is given a characterization as the lexicographic maxmin solution up to a normalization of utilities. The result can be translated to provide an axiomatic derivation of the Rawlsian lexmin choice function with a suitable redressing.]

On the Efficient Markets Hypothesis

Econometrica 1983 51(5), 1325
Economic theorists have interpreted the "efficient markets hypothesis" to assert that equilibrium asset prices reveal all decision-relevant information in the market. This paper establishes conditions on investors' utility functions of future wealth which are necessary for the efficient markets hypothesis to be satisfied and be robust to slight perturbations of endowments and the joint distribution of current information and future asset values. The main result states that over the relevant range of future wealth values, there are three possible cases: (i) all investors are risk-neutral; (ii) modulo a change in the wealth origin, each investor has constant relative risk aversion with the same constant for all investors; or (iii) all investors have constant absolute risk aversion.

Stationary Optimal Policies with Discounting in a Stochastic Activity Analysis Model

Econometrica 1983 51(6), 1821
We consider optimal capital accumulation in a nonlinear activity analysis model in which production and primary resource supplies are affected by a stationary stochastic process of exogenous shocks; the optimality criterion is the sum of discounted expected future social utilities. Under various neoclassical conditions on technology and preferences, (i) there exists an optimal policy of investment and consumption expressible as a continuous time-invariant function of the capital stocks and the history of stochastic shocks, and (ii) there is a stationary stochastic process of capital stocks that is consistent with the optimal policy.