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Functional Forms and the Demand for Meat in the United States: A Comment

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1980 62(1), 144
Box, George E. P., and David R. Cox, An Analysis of Transformations, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, series B, 26 (Apr. 1964), 211-243. Boyes, W. J., An Application of Specification Error Tests-The Liquidity Trap, Manchester School of Economics and Social Studies (1978), 139-151. Chang, Hui-shyong, Forms and the Demand for Meat in the United States, this REVIEW 59 (Aug. 1977), 355-359. Greenfield, J. N., Effects of Price Changes on the Demand for Meat, Monthly Bulletin of Agricultural Economics and Statistics 23(12) (1974), 1-8. Ramsey, James B., Limiting Functional Forms for Demand Functions: Tests of Some Specific Hypotheses, this REVIEW 56 (1974), 468-477.

The Effectiveness of Price Regulation

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1980 62(4), 555
That it is easier to measure the costs of price regulation than the benefits is evident in the conflicting results of studies made to determine welfare gains. An econometric study based on a simple theory of demand by customer class concludes that: (1) the effectiveness of regulation across states is irregular, which suggests that state regulatory agencies confront firms with highly variable political climates and may serve customers with an uneven quality of benefits; (2) the pattern of cross-subsidization of prices that penalized residential customers in 1969 was gone or shifted to favor residential customers by 1974; (3) a more-detailed re-evaluation of the presumed benefits and costs of nonuniform pricing may be warranted; and (4) welfare improvements appear to be possible. The dominant question that emerges is how to explain what underlying forces contribute to the substantial state-to-state and between-customer variations in regulatory impact. 13 references, 6 tables.

Does Reporting Deter Burglars?--An Empirical Analysis of Risk and Return in Crime

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1980 62(3), 424
T HE demand for private protection against crime1 and the interaction between private security and public safety have been analyzed in recent studies. While the deterrent effect of public law enforcement has been treated extensively in the literature, systematic empirical analyses of the effect of private enforcement on crime are few.2 Our emphasis is on a form of private behavior that may substantially affect the success of public law enforcement: victims' reporting of crimes to the police. Because apprehension of criminals crucially depends on the reporting of crimes, and because reporting increases the chances of apprehension and conviction, reporting should deter potential offenders. To study this deterrent effect, we chose to concentrate on residential burglary. Our data, collected in the National Crime Panel (NCP) victimization surveys, reveal that only about half of all burglaries were reported to the police. Our basic premise is that among potential victims who offer the same expected gross returns, those perceived by burglars as more likely to report are less attractive targets. This perceived reporting probability is then a victim-specific deterrent variable. The NCP victimization survey data provide opportunities to improve upon previous studies of deterrence that use only aggregate crime statistics. First, they allow us to construct a victim-specific deterrence variable, rather than to assume that all victims in a state or city impose on the offender the same amount of risk. Second, information on loot from burglary enables us to measure directly the illegal returns. Third, in contrast to police-recorded crime statistics, the NCP surveys include information on all crimes, reported or not. Finally, our data on individuals make it easier to avoid the simultaneity problem encountered in studies that employ data on aggregates.3 Consequently, this study tests the deterrence hypothesis more directly.

Macro Food Policy Planning: A General Equilibrium Model for Pakistan

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1980 62(1), 107
FOOD is macroeconomically important in poor countries, for obvious reasons. Agriculture (mainly staple food production, in most places) may make up half or more of total valueadded, and the average share of consumer expenditure going to food products is likely to be around 50% as well. Among the poor, the food budget share may be as high as three-quarters. Given all dimensions of the food sector (including production, processing, transportation and distribution activities, and consumption), the policy instruments that are supposed to influence its behavior also have noticeable macro repercussions. These have been little traced in the literature, though they can be important for all kinds of planning. In the medium to long run, for example, newly fashionable Basic Needs development strategies will require sustained growth in food intake on the part of the poorest half of the population in many countries. By Engel's Law, rapidly increasing staple food consumption imposes strong constraints on both growth and composition of aggregate demand. In the short run, food supply shortfalls and the threat of rising prices have forced more than one set of ministers to exit from the back door with rioters out front in the street. Corrective measures that they or their successors impose dramatically shift the balance of payments and government deficit positions. This paper is devoted to sketching how a simple macroeconomic model can provide guidance on how to calculate probable impacts of food policy changes in a poor country. We work specifically with Pakistan, and have tried to be as realistic as possible in designing an analytical scheme that can fit the available data, and give policy-relevant information. These requisites lead us to set up the data for accounting consistency in a Social Accounting Matrix (or SAM), discussed in the following section. Section III then outlines the structure of the analytical model built around the SAM, and section IV explains how it works. Several possible food policy interventions in Pakistan are discussed in section V, along with some implied policy conclusions. 1

The Role of Advertising in Changing Concentration of Manufacturing Industries

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1980 62(1), 89 open access
T HERE is increasing evidence that advertising plays an especially prominent role in structural change.' Mueller and Hamm (1974) found that between 1947 and 1970 concentration was increasing the most in industries characterized by a high degree of product differentiation. In reworking the Mueller-Hamm study because he felt that their model suffered from regression bias, Wright (1978) substantiated the Mueller-Hamm conclusions. Ornstein and Lustgarten (1978) found changes in industry advertising-to-sales ratios to be a significant positive variable in a model that explains changing industry concentration, although they are quite cautious in interpreting their findings. Here we add to previous work by reporting the major results from an analysis of changes in industry concentration based on a sample of 167 four-digit Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) industries for which comparable data were available for the period 1947 to 1972.2 Starting with a slightly modified Mueller-Hamm model we extend the analysis by replacing the dummy variable classification scheme for the degree of product differentiation developed by Parker (1967) with a continuous measure of advertising intensity.3 We then differentiate between television and other types of media advertising.

Choice of Functional Form and the Demand for Air Quality

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1980 62(4), 638
The quadratic Box-Cox approach is examined to determine its usefulness in demand research. In the absence of information about hedonic price and household demand structures, the flexible form is invaluable in both stages of the Rosen demand estimation procedure. The quadratic Box-Cox form permits a statistical investigation of a wide variety of specific hypotheses concerning specifications. Commonly-used functional forms in both the hedonic and demand stages are shown in the samples to be founded upon unacceptably restrictive hypotheses. The impact of changes in functional form upon demand-elasticity estimates and benefit estimates justify concern over the functional form-selection process. 8 references, 4 tables.