We derive several properties of commonly used discrete choice models that are potentially undesirable if these models are to be used as structural models of demand. Specifically, we show that as the number of goods in the market becomes large in these models, i) no product has a perfect substitute, ii) Bertrand-Nash markups do not converge to zero, iii) the fraction of utility derived from the observed product characteristics tends toward zero, iv) if an outside good is present, then the deterministic portion of utility from the inside goods must tend to negative infinity and v) there is always some consumer that is willing to pay an arbitrarily large sum for each good in the market
Marketing researchers have used models of consumer demand to forecast future sales; to describe and ...
We provide an alternative way to model sequential decision processes, which is consistent with the r...
We analyze the use of discrete choice models for the estimation of risk aversion and show a fundamen...
We derive some theoretical economic properties of standard discrete choice econo-metric models that ...
We show that with more than two options, a discrete choice model cannot generate linear demand. In d...
We provide a simple necessary and sufficient condition for when a multiproduct demand system can be ...
Small & Rosen’s 1981 paper has played an influential role in promoting the application of discre...
Although discrete choice models are well suited to describing the demand structure of differentiated...
This article introduces a discrete choice model which incorporates a nonlinear structural adjustment...
Since the pioneering work by Daniel McFadden, utility-maximization-based multinomial response models...
In this paper, we propose a flexible class of discrete choice models. These models are flexible in t...
In this paper I propose new continuous and discrete choice demand models. To do so, I note that exis...
The discrete choice models that we analyzed in Chapter 3 correspond to static decision problems. Fro...
Consumers in this model are assumed to maximize utility with respect to two goods, one of which is ...
Standard discrete choice models such as logit, nested logit, and random coef¿cients models place ver...
Marketing researchers have used models of consumer demand to forecast future sales; to describe and ...
We provide an alternative way to model sequential decision processes, which is consistent with the r...
We analyze the use of discrete choice models for the estimation of risk aversion and show a fundamen...
We derive some theoretical economic properties of standard discrete choice econo-metric models that ...
We show that with more than two options, a discrete choice model cannot generate linear demand. In d...
We provide a simple necessary and sufficient condition for when a multiproduct demand system can be ...
Small & Rosen’s 1981 paper has played an influential role in promoting the application of discre...
Although discrete choice models are well suited to describing the demand structure of differentiated...
This article introduces a discrete choice model which incorporates a nonlinear structural adjustment...
Since the pioneering work by Daniel McFadden, utility-maximization-based multinomial response models...
In this paper, we propose a flexible class of discrete choice models. These models are flexible in t...
In this paper I propose new continuous and discrete choice demand models. To do so, I note that exis...
The discrete choice models that we analyzed in Chapter 3 correspond to static decision problems. Fro...
Consumers in this model are assumed to maximize utility with respect to two goods, one of which is ...
Standard discrete choice models such as logit, nested logit, and random coef¿cients models place ver...
Marketing researchers have used models of consumer demand to forecast future sales; to describe and ...
We provide an alternative way to model sequential decision processes, which is consistent with the r...
We analyze the use of discrete choice models for the estimation of risk aversion and show a fundamen...