The measurement of price changes, economic welfare, and demand parameters is currently based on three disjoint approaches: macroeconomic models derived from time-invariant utility functions, microeconomic estimation based on time-varying utility (demand) systems, and actual price and real output data constructed using formulas that differ from either approach. The inconsistencies are so deep that the same assumptions that form the foundation of demand-system estimation can be used to prove that standard price indexes are incorrect, and the assumptions underlying standard exact and superlative price indexes invalidate demand-system estimation. In other words, we show that extant micro and macro welfare estimates are biased and inconsistent w...
This paper examines the robustness of Deaton’s widely used method for estimating consumer responses....
The first of the three parts of this thesis provides a theoretical and empirical examination of the ...
We present a revealed preference methodology for nonparametric demand analysis under the assumption ...
What is the welfare effect of a price change? This simple question is one of the most relevant and c...
How should we measure long-run changes in consumer welfare? This paper proposes a nonparametric appr...
This paper questions the alleged superiority of superlative prices indices (like the Fisher index) o...
Abstract—This paper examines the construction of a price index based on an estimated-demand system. ...
This thesis uses nonparametric revealed preference methods to derive new tests for consistency with ...
In this thesis, I study large-scale demand systems with a focus on characterizing sufficient statist...
Conventional wisdom in macroeconomics suggests that price sta-bility is a su ¢ cient condition to av...
The most important economic measures are monetary. They have many different names, are derived in di...
This paper presents three contributions to the literature on the welfare cost of ination. First, it ...
Economics has traditionally understood ‘welfare’ (what makes a life go well) as the satisfaction of ...
Classical welfare economics assumes that the demand function, or consumers’ utility, is known with c...
The most important economic measures are monetary. They have many different names, are derived in di...
This paper examines the robustness of Deaton’s widely used method for estimating consumer responses....
The first of the three parts of this thesis provides a theoretical and empirical examination of the ...
We present a revealed preference methodology for nonparametric demand analysis under the assumption ...
What is the welfare effect of a price change? This simple question is one of the most relevant and c...
How should we measure long-run changes in consumer welfare? This paper proposes a nonparametric appr...
This paper questions the alleged superiority of superlative prices indices (like the Fisher index) o...
Abstract—This paper examines the construction of a price index based on an estimated-demand system. ...
This thesis uses nonparametric revealed preference methods to derive new tests for consistency with ...
In this thesis, I study large-scale demand systems with a focus on characterizing sufficient statist...
Conventional wisdom in macroeconomics suggests that price sta-bility is a su ¢ cient condition to av...
The most important economic measures are monetary. They have many different names, are derived in di...
This paper presents three contributions to the literature on the welfare cost of ination. First, it ...
Economics has traditionally understood ‘welfare’ (what makes a life go well) as the satisfaction of ...
Classical welfare economics assumes that the demand function, or consumers’ utility, is known with c...
The most important economic measures are monetary. They have many different names, are derived in di...
This paper examines the robustness of Deaton’s widely used method for estimating consumer responses....
The first of the three parts of this thesis provides a theoretical and empirical examination of the ...
We present a revealed preference methodology for nonparametric demand analysis under the assumption ...