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    Estimation of Theoretically Plausible Demand Functions from U.S. Consumer Expenditure Survey Data

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    Author
    Taylor, Lester D.
    Affiliation
    University of Arizona
    Issue Date
    2005-04
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Taylor, Lester D. (2005). Estimation of Theoretically Plausible Demand Functions from U.S. Consumer Expenditure Survey Data. Cardon Research Papers in Agricultural and Resource Economics (Working Papers Series) 2004-15. The Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, The University of Arizona.
    Publisher
    College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
    Description
    Working paper. September 2004, revised April 2005.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/678419
    Abstract
    The purpose of this paper is the application of four popular theoretically plausible consumer demand systems to a common cross-sectional data set that combines expenditure data from the quarterly BLS consumer expenditure surveys with price data that are collected quarterly in cost-of-living surveys conducted by ACCRA. Six broad categories of expenditure that exhaust total expenditure are analyzed: food consumed at home, housing, utilities, transportation, health care, and miscellaneous. The four demand systems investigated are the Almost-Ideal-Demand-System, the Linear Expenditure System, and the Indirect and Direct Addilog models. Despite absolute differences in magnitudes that in some instances are rather large, there is substantial agreement in the rank-orderings of elasticities. In general, the largest elasticities (for both own-price and total expenditure) are for transportation, miscellaneous, and housing expenditures, while the smallest elasticities (again for both own-price and total expenditure) are for food and utility expenditures. Engel's Law for food is confirmed in all instances.
    Type
    Article
    text
    Language
    en
    Series/Report no.
    Cardon Research Papers in Agricultural and Resource Economics (Working Papers Series) 2004-15
    Collections
    Cardon Working Papers Archive

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