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1 – 6 of 6Adrian R. Fleissig and Gerald A. Whitney
A new nonparametric procedure is developed to evaluate the significance of violations of weak separability. The procedure correctly detects weak separability with high probability…
Abstract
A new nonparametric procedure is developed to evaluate the significance of violations of weak separability. The procedure correctly detects weak separability with high probability using simulated data that have violations of weak separability caused by adding measurement error. Results are not very sensitive when the amount of measurement error is miss-specified by the researcher. The methodology also correctly rejects weak separability for nonseparable simulated data. We fail to reject weak separability for a monetary and consumption data set that has violations of revealed preference, which suggests that measurement error may be the source of the observed violations.
Leigh Drake and Adrian R. Fleissig
This chapter examines factors that cause violations of regularity conditions and biases in estimates of substitution. In the context of the Fourier demand system, failing to…
Abstract
This chapter examines factors that cause violations of regularity conditions and biases in estimates of substitution. In the context of the Fourier demand system, failing to impose curvature restrictions but correcting for serial correlation results in few violations of the curvature conditions. In contrast, imposing curvature restrictions without correcting for serial correlation biases substitution estimates and can cause violations of monotonicity. For serially correlated data, results suggest that correcting for serial correlation may be more important than imposing curvature. Furthermore, the artificially break-adjusted data that are inconsistent with consumer optimization can severely bias estimates. Results from the Bank of England's (BOE) preferred non-break-adjusted data establish that money and goods are substitutes in demand.