Simultaneous Equation Econometrics: The Missing Example
Dennis Epple and
Bennett McCallum
No 2004-E6, GSIA Working Papers from Carnegie Mellon University, Tepper School of Business
Abstract:
For introductory presentation of issues involving identification and estimation of simultaneous equation systems, a natural vehicle is a model consisting of supply and demand relationships to explain price and quantity variables for a single good. One would accordingly expect to find in introductory econometrics textbooks a supply-demand example featuring actual data in which structural estimation methods yield more satisfactory results than ordinary least squares. In a search of 26 existing textbooks, however, we have found no such example-indeed, no example with actual data in which all parameter estimates are of the proper sign and statistically significant. This absence is documented in the present paper. Its main contribution, however, is the development of a simple but satisfying example, for broiler chickens, based on U.S. annual data over 1960-1999.
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Journal Article: Simultaneous Equation Econometrics: The Missing Example (2006) 
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