Differences in estimated parameters depending on the frequency of aggregate data have been reported in several fields of economic research. Some differences are due to seasonal variations in demand, but temporal aggregation bias is reported even in seasonally adjusted models. These biases have been explained by time-nonseparable preferences and excluded dynamic components. We show that it is possible to observe temporal aggregation bias in a seasonally adjusted static model even when preferences are time-separable. This is because of changes in the distribution of exogenous factors describing the variation in seasonal demand across consumers. To show this, we develop a method for aggregation based on an Almost Ideal Demand System, where dem...
We investigate the impact of preference shocks on the aggregate dynamics of the U.S. economy in the ...
Consumer demand analysis attracts considerable attention. It remains an open question, however, whet...
Typescript (photocopy).The economist is often forced, by availability, to use data which is aggregat...
Abstract: Differences in estimated parameters depending on the frequency of aggregate data have bee...
This paper specifies and empirically analyzes a continuous-time, linear-quadratic, representative co...
Habitual behaviour in consumer demand analysis is generally portrayed via some form of a lagged depe...
This study revisits the consistent aggregation (over households) property of almost ideal demand sys...
Earlier research on the effects of nonoverlapping temporal aggregation on demand forecasting showed ...
This paper studies under which conditions a cross-sectional regression yields unbiased estimates of ...
International audienceThis paper studies under which conditions a cross-sectional regression yields ...
We study the impact of individual and temporal aggregation in linear static and dy-namic models for ...
Abstract: Heterogeneity in consumer behaviour creates differences in demand responses, which may cre...
This study analyzes U.S. consumers' demand for eight food commodity groups: Cereal and Bakery goods,...
Abstract: In the aggregation literature, prices and price and income derivatives are often assumed ...
This paper examines the quantitative importance of temporal aggregation bias in distorting parameter...
We investigate the impact of preference shocks on the aggregate dynamics of the U.S. economy in the ...
Consumer demand analysis attracts considerable attention. It remains an open question, however, whet...
Typescript (photocopy).The economist is often forced, by availability, to use data which is aggregat...
Abstract: Differences in estimated parameters depending on the frequency of aggregate data have bee...
This paper specifies and empirically analyzes a continuous-time, linear-quadratic, representative co...
Habitual behaviour in consumer demand analysis is generally portrayed via some form of a lagged depe...
This study revisits the consistent aggregation (over households) property of almost ideal demand sys...
Earlier research on the effects of nonoverlapping temporal aggregation on demand forecasting showed ...
This paper studies under which conditions a cross-sectional regression yields unbiased estimates of ...
International audienceThis paper studies under which conditions a cross-sectional regression yields ...
We study the impact of individual and temporal aggregation in linear static and dy-namic models for ...
Abstract: Heterogeneity in consumer behaviour creates differences in demand responses, which may cre...
This study analyzes U.S. consumers' demand for eight food commodity groups: Cereal and Bakery goods,...
Abstract: In the aggregation literature, prices and price and income derivatives are often assumed ...
This paper examines the quantitative importance of temporal aggregation bias in distorting parameter...
We investigate the impact of preference shocks on the aggregate dynamics of the U.S. economy in the ...
Consumer demand analysis attracts considerable attention. It remains an open question, however, whet...
Typescript (photocopy).The economist is often forced, by availability, to use data which is aggregat...