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A Note of Identification and Information Loss through Aggregation

Econometrica 1976 44(4), 815
DISCUSSIONS OF IDENTIFICATION of parameters in simultaneous equation econometric models almost invariably assume that data are in the form of aggregative time series, i.e., only one measurement of each variable is available in each time period. This note shows that parameters in a model which is underidentified by the usual rank and order criteria at the aggregative level may be identified when disaggregated data aie available. The argument is presented in terms of a traditional textbook example of an underidentified model which consists of a demand and a supply function for a single commodity that are linear in price, and a market clearing equilibrium equation.

Health, Family Structure, and Labor Supply

American Economic Review 1976
I consider the health, family structure, and labor supply inter-relationships at both a theoretical and empirical level. The paper is organized in the following way. SectionI introduces the material. In Section II, a theoretical model of family time allocation among market, home, and health activities is developed. The concept of a family health maintenance function is formalized to generate qualitative predictions of the effect of wages, health status, health care efficiency, and property income on the labor supply of husband and wife. In Section III, data from the older male portion of the National Longitudinal Surveys are used to estimate labor supply functions for married and single men with special attention to differences in poor health responses. A simultaneous model of male labor supply and other family income (chiefly transfer income and the earnings of the wife) is then estimated to determine whether variations in the work hours of males, largely due to health differences, induce any substantial changes in income producing activities by other family members. Finally, in Section IV the detailed time budget data on both males and females from the Productive Americans Survey are used to estimate more precisely the effect of health on total family time allocations. These data provide estimates of the impact of poor health on home production time as well as market time for both husband and wife.

The Incentives for Price-Taking Behavior in Large Exchange Economies

Econometrica 1976 44(1), 115
[This paper investigates the justification for the competitive assumption that consumers will act as price takers by considering the utility gain an individual can achieve by manipulating price formation through the use of non-competitive behavior. Although announcing one's competitive demand is generally not a best replay against the excess demand of the rest of the economy, we show that, as the number of consumers becomes large, the gain any one can achieve acting monopolistically goes to zero if the increase in numbers comes through replication or if the sequence of economies converges to an economy at which the equilibrium price correspondence is continuous.]

Session Topic: Inflation and Stock Prices: Discussion

Journal of Finance 1976 31(2), 483
Donald A. Nichols, Session Topic: Inflation and Stock Prices: Discussion, The Journal of Finance, Vol. 31, No. 2, Papers and Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the American Finance Association Dallas, Texas December 28-30, 1975 (May, 1976), pp. 483-487