A discrete choice model for partially ordered alternatives
Eleni Aristodemou () and
Adam Rosen
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Eleni Aristodemou: Institute for Fiscal Studies and University College London
No CWP62/19, CeMMAP working papers from Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice, Institute for Fiscal Studies
Abstract:
In this paper we analyze a discrete choice model for partially ordered alternatives. The alternatives are di?erentiated along two dimensions, the ?rst an unordered “horizontal” dimension, and the second an ordered “vertical” dimension. The model can be used in circumstances in which individuals choose amongst products of di?erent brands, wherein each brand o?ers an ordered choice menu, for example by o?ering products of varying quality. The unordered-ordered nature of the discrete choice problem is used to characterize the identi?ed set of model parameters. Following an initial nonparametric analysis that relies on shape restrictions inherent in the ordered dimension of the problem, we then provide a specialized analysis for a parametric generalization of the ordered probit model. Conditions for point identi?cation are established when the distribution of unobservable heterogeneity is known, but remain elusive when the distribution is instead restricted to the multivariate normal family with parameterized variance. Rather than invoke the restriction that the distribution is known, or simply assume that model parameters are point identi?ed, we consider the use of inference methods that allow for the possibility of set identi?cation, and which are therefore robust to the possible lack of point identi?cation. A Monte Carlo analysis is provided in which inference is carried out using a method proposed by Chen, Christensen, and Tamer (2018), which is insensitive to the possible lack of point identi?cation and is found to perform adequately. An empirical illustration is then conducted using consumer purchase data in the UK to study consumers’ choice of razor blades in which each brand has product o?erings vertically di?erentiated by quality.
Date: 2019-11-18
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-com, nep-dcm and nep-ecm
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Journal Article: A discrete choice model for partially ordered alternatives (2022) 
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