Handbook of econometrics: 6[,1]=6A
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam [u.a.]
Elsevier
2007
|
Ausgabe: | 1. ed. |
Schriftenreihe: | Handbooks in economics
2,6[,1] |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXVIII S., S. 3848 - 4775, 52 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780444506313 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | CONTENTS
OF
VOLUME 6A
Introduction to the Series
v
Contents of the Handbook
vii
Preface to the Handbook
xv
PART
14:
ECONOMETRIC MODELS FOR PREFERENCES AND PRICING
Chapter
60
Nonparametric Approaches to Auctions
SUSAN ATHEY and PHILIP A. HAILE
3847
Abstract
3849
Keywords
3849
1.
Introduction
3850
2.
Theoretical framework
3854
2.
1
.
Demand and information structures
3854
2.2.
Equilibrium bidding
3856
3.
First-price auctions with private values: Basic results
3862
3.1.
Identification
3862
3.2.
Estimation
3863
3.3.
Incomplete bid data and Dutch auctions
3869
4.
Ascending auctions with private values: Basic results
3873
4.1.
Identification
3873
4.2.
Estimation
3874
4.3.
An alternative, incomplete model of ascending auctions
3876
5.
Specification testing
3882
5.1.
Theoretica! restrictions in first-price auction models
3883
5.2.
Testing monotonicityof bid functions and boundary conditions
3886
5.3.
Multi-sample tests with exogenous variation in participation
3887
5.4.
Multi-sample tests with multiple order statistics
3888
5.5.
Direct tests of exchangeability or independence
3888
6.
Extensions of the basic results
3890
6.1.
Auction heterogeneity
3890
6.2.
Bidder heterogeneity
3901
6.3.
Endogenous participation
3905
6.4.
Riskaversion
3918
7.
Common values auctions
3925
xx Contents
of
volume
6A
7.1.
Limits of identification with a fixed number of bidders
3927
7.2.
Pure common values
3929
8.
Private versus common values: Testing
3937
8.1.
Testing in first-price auctions when all bids are observed
3939
8.2.
Testing with endogenous participation
3942
8.3.
Testing with incomplete bid data
3943
8.4.
Testing with a binding reserve price
3945
9.
Dynamics
3946
10.
Multi-unit and multi-object auctions
3950
10.1.
Auctions of perfect substitutes
3950
10.2.
Auctions of imperfect substitutes and complements
3953
11.
Concluding remarks
3957
References
3959
Chapter
61
Intertemporal
Substitution and Risk Aversion
LARS PETER
HANSEN,
JOHN HEATON, JUNGHOON LEE and
NIKOLAI ROUSSANOV
3967
Abstract
3968
Keywords
3969
1.
Introduction
3970
2.
Investor preferences
3971
2.1.
Risk adjustment
3972
2.2.
Robustness and uncertainty aversion
3974
2.3.
Intertemporal
complementarity and social externalities
3976
3.
Stochastic discount factors
3976
3.1.
One-period pricing
3977
3.2.
CES
benchmark
3979
4.
Empirical observations from asset returns
3980
4.1.
Log linear approximation and present values
3981
4.2.
Testassets
3986
5.
Intertemporal
substitution and pricing
3989
5.1.
Discrete time
3990
5.2.
Wealth and asset price variation
4000
5.3.
Continuous time
4007
6.
Information about risk aversion from multiple returns
4020
7.
GMM estimation of stochastic discount factor models
4025
7.1.
Identification
4025
7.2.
Conditioning information
4028
7.3.
GMM estimation
4029
7.4.
GMM system estimation
4031
7.5.
Inference by simulation
4032
7.6.
Estimation under misspecification
4033
Contents
of
volume 6A
xxi
7.7.
Intertemporal
elasticity estimation
4035
7.8.
CES
Preferences and the wealth return
4039
7.9.
Multiple assets and Markov chain Monte Carlo
4041
8.
Conclusions
4045
Appendix A: Additional formulas for the Kreps-Porteus model
4048
A.I. Discrete time
4048
A.2. Continuous time
4049
Appendix B: Bayesian confidence intervals
4050
Appendix C: MCMC
4051
Appendix D: Data description
4052
References
4052
Chapter
62
A Practitioner s Approach to Estimating
Intertemporal
Relationships Using
Longitudinal Data: Lessons from Applications in Wage Dynamics
THOMAS MACURDY
4057
Abstract
4060
Keywords
4060
1.
Introduction
4061
2.
Empirical specifications describing panel data dynamics
4064
2.1.
General characterization of empirical specifications
4065
2.2.
Sources of dynamics
4066
2.3.
Dynamic simultaneous equation models
4068
2.4.
Modeling dynamics through error structures
4070
2.5.
Dynamic quantile regressions
4072
3.
Basic estimation concepts and challenges
4073
3.1.
Overview of method of moments estimation procedures
4074
3.2.
Challenges
4080
4.
Simplified estimation approaches
4085
4.1.
Several important computational simplifications
4086
4.2.
Estimating subsets of parameters
4090
4.3.
Estimation of covariance parameters
4093
4.4.
Direct estimation of autocovariances using residuals
4100
4.5.
Direct estimation of
autoregressive
parameters
4101
4.6.
Estimation of the partial correlation coefficients
4103
4.7.
Direct estimation of moving-average parameters
4104
5.
Estimating dynamic quantile specifications
4106
5.1.
Using nonlinear instrumental variable procedures to estimate quantile regressions
4106
5.2.
Jointly estimating combinations of quantile regressions
4109
6.
Use of sample weights and unbalanced data
4111
6.1.
Basics of weighting to account for stratified sampling
4111
6.2.
Weighting to account for more sophisticated sample stratification
4113
6.3.
Weighting in method-of-moments procedures to compute estimators
4115
xxii Contents
of volume 6A
6.4.
Weighting in LS and instrumental variable procedures to compute estimators
4116
6.5.
Which weights should be used in longitudinal analyses?
4120
6.6.
Estimation with unbalanced data
4121
6.7.
Weighting and unbalanced data in the estimation of quantile specifications
4125
7.
An empirical application to wage dynamics
4126
7.1.
Data description and prototype model
4127
7.2.
Estimation of autocorrelations
4128
7.3.
Empirical specifications for
ARMA
error process
4131
7.4.
Empirical findings for
ARMA
estimation
4134
7.5.
Bootstrapping
ARMA
models using panel data
4136
7.6.
Results based on balanced versus unbalanced data
4137
7.7.
Results based on weighted versus unweighted data
4139
7.8.
Results based on median regressions
4143
7.9.
Summary of findings
4150
8.
Summary and concluding remarks
4152
Appendix A: Specifying the covariance matrix for an
ARMA
process
4155
Appendix B: A general approach for estimating
ARMA
processes
4158
References
4161
PART
15:
THE ECONOMETRICS OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION
Chapter
63
Econometric Tools for Analyzing Market Outcomes
DANIEL
ACKERBERG,
С.
LANIER
BENKARD, STEVEN BERRY and
ARIEL PAKES
4171
Abstract
4172
Keywords
4173
1.
Demand systems
4178
1.1.
Characteristic space: The issues
4181
1.2.
Characteristic space: Details of a simple model
4185
1.3.
Steps in estimation: Product level data
4188
1.4.
Additional sources of information on demand parameters
4190
1.5.
Problems with the framework
4198
.,6.
Econometric details
4202
1.7.
Concluding remark
4204
2.
Production functions
4205
2.1.
Basic econometric endogeneity issues
4205
2.2.
Traditional solutions
4207
2.3.
The Olley and Pakes
( 1996 )
approach
4210
2.4.
Extensions and discussion of OP
4222
2.5.
Concluding remark
4232
3.
Dynamic estimation
4233
3.
1
.
Why are we interested?
4234
Contents
of
volume 6A
xxiii
3.2.
Framework
4235
3.3.
Alternative
estimation approaches
4241
3.4.
A starting point: Hotz and Miller
4246
3.5.
Dynamic discrete games: Entry and exit
4249
3.6.
Models with discrete and continuous controls: Investment games
4257
3.7.
A dynamic auction game
4266
3.8.
Outstanding issues
4269
References
4271
Chapter
64
Structural Econometric Modeling: Rationales and Examples from Industrial
Organization
PETER
С
REISS and FRANK A. WOLAK
4277
Abstract
4280
Keywords
4280
1.
Introduction
4281
2.
Structural models defined
4282
3.
Constructing structural models
4285
3.1.
Sources of structure
4285
3.2.
Why add structure?
4288
3.3.
Evaluating structure
-
single equation models
4290
3.4.
Evaluating structure
-
simultaneous equation models
4293
3.5.
Theroleof nonexperimental data in structural modeling
4301
4.
A framework for structural econometric models in
IO
4303
4.1.
The economic model
4304
4.2.
The stochastic model
4304
4.3.
Steps to estimation
4312
4.4.
Structural model epilogue
4314
5.
Demand and cost function estimation under imperfect competition
4315
5.1.
Using price and quantity data to diagnose collusion
4315
5.2.
The economic model
4317
5.3.
Summary
4324
6.
Market power models more generally
4325
6.1.
Estimating price-cost margins
4326
6.2.
Identifying and interpreting price-cost margins
4329
6.3.
Summary
4333
7.
Models of differentiated product competition
4334
7.1.
Neoclassical demand models
4334
7.2.
Micro-data models
4340
7.3.
A product-level demand model
4348
7.4.
More on the econometric assumptions
4353
7.5.
Summary
4360
8.
Games with incomplete information: Auctions
4361
xxiv
Contents of volume 6A
8.1.
Auctions overview
4361
8.2.
Further issues
4374
8.3.
Parametric specifications for auction market equilibria
4375
8.4.
Why estimate a structural auction model?
4379
8.5.
Extensions of basic auctions models
4381
9.
Games with incomplete information: Principal-agent contracting models
4382
9.1.
Observables
and unobservables
4383
9.2.
Economic models of regulator-utility interactions
4385
9.3.
Estimating productions functions accounting for private information
4388
9.4.
Econometric model
4393
9.5.
Estimation results
4397
9.6.
Further extensions
4398
10.
Market structure and firm turnover
4398
10.1.
Overview of the issues
4399
10.2.
An economic model and data
4402
10.3.
Modeling profits and competition
4404
10.4.
The econometric model
4406
10.5.
Estimation
4409
10.6.
Epilogue
4410
11.
Ending remarks
4411
References
4412
Chapter
65
Microeconometric Models of Investment and Employment
STEPHEN BOND and JOHN VAN
REENEN
4417
Abstract
4418
Keywords
4419
1.
Introduction
4420
2.
Theoretical framework
4423
2.1.
Static factor demand
4424
2.2.
Dynamic factor demand
4429
3.
Dynamic investment models
4430
3.1.
The
Q
model
4431
3.2.
The Abel and
Blanchard
model
4435
3.3.
The
Euler
equation
4435
3.4.
Multiple quasi-fixed factors
4436
3.5.
Non-convex adjustment costs
4438
3.6.
Reduced form models
4443
4.
Econometric issues
4447
4.1.
Stochastic specification and identification
4447
4.2.
Estimation
4450
5.
Data
4453
6.
Topics in investment
4456
Contents
of
volume 6A
xxv
6.1.
Some basic
findings
4456
6.2.
Financing constraints
4459
6.3.
Taxes and the user cost of capital
4472
6.4.
Uncertainty
4473
6.5.
R&D investment
4475
7.
Topics in employment
4478
7.1.
Variation in wages
4479
7.2.
Union bargaining
4479
7.3.
Dynamics
of adjustment
4480
7.4.
Gross vs. net flows
4483
7.5.
Heterogeneous labour and skill-biased technical change
4483
8.
Conclusions
4488
References
4490
PART
16:
INDEX NUMBERS AND THE ECONOMETRICS OF TRADE
Chapter
66
The Measurement of Productivity for Nations
W.
ERWIN
DIEWERT and ALICE O. NAKAMURA
4501
Abstract
4502
Keywords
4503
1.
Introduction
4504
2.
Alternative productivity measurement concepts
4508
2.1.
The
1-1
case
4509
2.2.
The
2-1
case
451 1
2.3.
Different types of measures of productivity
4512
3.
Four TFPG concepts in the N-M case
4515
3.1.
Price weighted volume aggregates
4515
3.2.
The Paasche, Laspeyres and Fisher volume and price indexes
4516
3.3.
TFPG measures for the N-M case
4518
3.4.
Other index number formuias
4520
3.5.
The
Törnqvist
(or
Translog)
indexes
4522
4.
The axiomatic (or test) approach to index formula choice
4523
5.
The exact approach and superlative index numbers
4525
6.
Production function based measures of TFPG
4530
6.1.
Technical progress
(TP)
and returns to scale (RS) in the simple
1-1
case
4531
6.2.
Malmquist
indexes
4534
6.3.
Direct evaluation of
Malmquist
indexes for the N-M case
4538
7.
Cost function based measures
4540
8.
The Divisia approach
4543
9.
Growth accounting
4546
9.1.
Solow s
1957
paper
4547
9.2.
Intermediate goods and the KLEMS approach
4549
xxvi
Contents of volume 6A
10.
Improving the model
4551
10.1.
Different concepts of national product and income
4552
10.2.
Relaxing the constant returns to scale assumption
4555
11.
Diewert-Kohli—Morrison
(DKM)
revenue function based productivity
measures
4560
12.
Concluding remarks
4564
12.1.
Choice of measure effects
4565
12.2.
Better price measurement
=
better productivity measures
4565
12.3.
The measurement of capital services
4567
12.4.
Labor services of workers and service products
4568
12.5.
A need for official statistics and business world harmonization
4569
12.6.
The role of official statistics for globally united nations
4571
References
4571
Chapter
67
Linking the Theory with the Data: That is the Core Problem of International
Economics
EDWARD E. LEAMER
4587
Abstract
4588
Keywords
4588
1.
Methodological shortcomings of econometric theory
4589
1.1.
The context matters
4589
1.2.
All models are false
4590
1.3.
The goal of this paper is to broaden the conversation
4591
1.4.
Summary
4592
2.
Theory of international comparative advantage
4592
2.1.
The elements of a model of international competition
4592
2.2.
Theorems: Outputs and factor prices
4593
2.3.
Theorems: International trade
4595
3.
But what are the questions?
4595
4.
Evidence regarding truthfulness of the model
4596
4.1. Leontief
Paradox: Why did he not use a theory?
4597
4.2.
Bowen—Learner—Sveikauskas factor content tests are unsettling
4597
4.3.
Searching for the truth
4598
5.
Evidence regarding the accuracy of the model
4599
5.1.
Intra-industry trade and trade volumes
4599
5.2.
Cross-commodity comparisons
4600
5.3.
Cross-country comparisons
4600
5.4.
Search for cones
4600
6.
Evidence regarding usefulness of the model
4603
7.
Applications of the model: The US labor market
4603
8.
Conclusions: Questions, theory and data
4604
References
4605
Contents
of
volume 6A xxvii
PART
17: MODELS
OF CONSUMER AND WORKER CHOICE
Chapter
68
Models of Aggregate Economic Relationships that Account for Heterogeneity
RICHARD BLUNDELL and THOMAS M. STOKER
4609
Abstract
4610
Keywords
4610
1.
Introduction
4611
2.
Consumer demand analysis
4615
2.1.
Aggregation of consumer demand relationships
4616
2.2.
Empirical evidence and the specification of aggregate demand models
4623
2.3.
Aggregation of demand without individual structure
4628
3.
Consumption and wealth
4629
3.1.
Consumption growth and income shocks
4630
3.2.
Aggregate consumption growth with precautionary saving
4634
3.3.
Empirical evidence on aggregating the consumption growth relationship
4639
3.4.
Consumption and liquidity constraints
4642
3.5.
Equilibrium effects
4645
4.
Wages and labor participation
4646
4.1.
Individual wages and participation
4647
4.2.
Aggregate wages and employment
4649
4.3.
Empirical analysis of British wages
4651
5.
Conclusion
4656
References
4659
Further reading
4663
Chapter
69
Labor Supply Models: Unobserved Heterogeneity, Nonparticipation and Dy¬
namics
RICHARD BLUNDELL, THOMAS MACURDY and
COSTAS MEGHIR
4667
Abstract
4670
Keywords
4670
1.
Introduction
4671
2.
Estimation and identification with participation with proportional taxes
4671
2.1.
Static specifications
4672
2.2.
Estimation of the static labor supply model
4676
2.3.
The censored regression model
4678
2.4.
Missing wages
4680
2.5.
Fixed costs
4682
3.
Difference-in-differences, natural experiments and grouping methods
4686
3.1.
Difference-in-differences and fixed effects models
4686
3.2.
Estimating a structural parameter
4688
3.3.
Grouping estimators
4689
xxviii Contents
of
volume
6A
3.4.
The difference-in-differences estimator and behavioral responses
4692
4.
Estimation with nonlinear budget constraints
4693
4.1.
Modeling nonlinear features of budget constraints
4694
4.2.
Simple characterizations of labor supply and consumption with differentiable constraints
4699
4.3.
Instrumental variable estimation
4700
4.4.
Maximum likelihood estimation: A general representation
4703
4.5.
Maximum likelihood: Convex differentiable constraints with full participation
4713
4.6.
Maximum likelihood: Convex piecewise-linear constraints with full participation
4715
4.7.
Maximum likelihood estimation imposes restrictions on behavioral responses
4719
4.8.
Maximum likelihood: Accounting for participation and missing wages
4721
4.9.
Welfare participation: Maximum likelihood with nonconvex constraints
4724
4.10.
Computational simplification by making hours choices discrete
4729
5.
Family labor supply
4730
5.1.
The standard unitary family labor supply model
4731
5.2.
Discrete hours of work and program participation
4733
5.3.
Collective models of family labor supply
4734
6.
Intertemporal
models of labor supply
4737
6.1.
Intertemporal
labor supply with saving
4738
6.2.
Further issues in the specification and estimation of dynamic models of labor supply
and consumption
4751
6.3.
Dynamic discrete choice models and
intertemporal nonseparability
4754
6.4.
Estimation with saving, participation and unobserved heterogeneity
4757
7.
Summary and conclusions
4762
Appendix A
4763
A.
1.
Overview of statistical framework
4763
A.2. Discrete variables:
AU
and combinations of states
4765
A3.
Continuous variables: All states observed
4766
A.4. Discrete/continuous variables: All states observed
4767
A.5. Discrete/continuous variables: Combinations of states
4768
A.6. Accounting for unobserved and exogenous variables
4770
References
4771
Author Index of Volumes 6A and 6B I-
1
Subject Index of Volumes 6A and 6B
1-33
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author2 | Heckman, James J. 1944- Durlauf, Steven N. |
author2_role | edt edt |
author2_variant | j j h jj jjh s n d sn snd |
author_GND | (DE-588)12379918X (DE-588)128844329 (DE-588)128549599 |
author_facet | Heckman, James J. 1944- Durlauf, Steven N. |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV019321040 |
classification_rvk | QH 300 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)229921437 (DE-599)BVBBV019321040 |
dewey-full | 330/.01/5119520 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 330 - Economics |
dewey-raw | 330/.01/51195 20 |
dewey-search | 330/.01/51195 20 |
dewey-sort | 3330 11 551195 220 |
dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 1. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV019321040 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T19:57:36Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780444506313 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-012788345 |
oclc_num | 229921437 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-703 DE-1047 DE-N2 DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-92 DE-521 |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-703 DE-1047 DE-N2 DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-92 DE-521 |
physical | XXVIII S., S. 3848 - 4775, 52 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Elsevier |
record_format | marc |
series | Handbooks in economics |
series2 | Handbooks in economics |
spelling | Handbook of econometrics 6[,1]=6A ed. by Zvi Griliches ... 1. ed. Amsterdam [u.a.] Elsevier 2007 XXVIII S., S. 3848 - 4775, 52 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Handbooks in economics 2,6[,1] Handbooks in economics 2 Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 s DE-604 Griliches, Zvi 1930-1999 Sonstige (DE-588)12379918X oth Heckman, James J. 1944- (DE-588)128844329 edt Durlauf, Steven N. (DE-588)128549599 edt (DE-604)BV000175133 6,1 Handbooks in economics 2,6[,1] (DE-604)BV000009734 2,6,1 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=012788345&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Handbook of econometrics Handbooks in economics Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4132280-0 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Handbook of econometrics |
title_auth | Handbook of econometrics |
title_exact_search | Handbook of econometrics |
title_full | Handbook of econometrics 6[,1]=6A ed. by Zvi Griliches ... |
title_fullStr | Handbook of econometrics 6[,1]=6A ed. by Zvi Griliches ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Handbook of econometrics 6[,1]=6A ed. by Zvi Griliches ... |
title_short | Handbook of econometrics |
title_sort | handbook of econometrics |
topic | Ökonometrie (DE-588)4132280-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Ökonometrie Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=012788345&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000175133 (DE-604)BV000009734 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT grilicheszvi handbookofeconometrics616a AT heckmanjamesj handbookofeconometrics616a AT durlaufstevenn handbookofeconometrics616a |