1,548 research outputs found

    Pregibit: A Family of Discrete Choice Models

    Get PDF
    The pregibit discrete choice model is built on a distribution that allows symmetry or asymmetry and thick tails, thin tails or no tails. Thus the model is much richer than the traditional models that are typically used to study behavior that generates discrete choice outcomes. Pregibit nests logit, approximately nests probit, loglog, cloglog and gosset models, and yields a linear probability model that is solidly founded on the discrete choice framework that underlies logit and probit.post-secondary education, probit, logit, asymmetry, discrete choice, mortgage application

    Diagnosing the Productivity Effect of Public Capital in the Private Sector

    Get PDF
    Does public capital contribute to the productivity in the private sector? If so, which part of the private sector benefits most? Is public capital a substitute for or a complement of labor and private capital? This paper addresses these questions with both cost and profit function models estimated on U.S. time series data of the private sector and two of its subsectors. It pays special attention to nonstationarity in the data, to endogeneity in the price variables, and to the statistical and economic significance of the public capital effect.

    Household enterprises in Vietnam : survival, growth, and living standards

    Get PDF
    In Vietnam almost a quarter of adults worked in nonfarm household enterprises in 1998. Based on household panel data from the Vietnam Living Standards Surveys of 1993 and 1998, the authors find some evidence that operating an enterprise leads to greater affluence. The data show that nonfarm household enterprises are most likely to be operated by urban households, by those with moderately good education, and by the children of proprietors. The authors were able to construct a panel of nonfarm household enterprises; 39 percent of enterprises operating in 1993 were still in business in 1998. Those in the (more affluent) south of the country were less likely to survive, as were smaller and younger businesses. A pattern emerges from the data. In poor areas the lack of education, credit, and effective demand limits the development of nonfarm household enterprises. In rich areas there is the attraction of wage labor. Nonfarm household enterprises are thus most important in the period of transition, when agriculture is declining in importance but before the formal sector becomes established. The authors expect these enterprises to continue to play a modest supporting role in fostering economic growth in Vietnam.Public Health Promotion,Housing&Human Habitats,Banks&Banking Reform,Municipal Financial Management,Microfinance,Banks&Banking Reform,Municipal Financial Management,Small and Medium Size Enterprises,Private Participation in Infrastructure,Microfinance

    Discrete Choices in a Continuous Time Model: Lifecycle Time Allocation and Fertility Decisions

    Get PDF

    Unbiased Estimates of the Wage Equation When Individuals Choose Among Income-Earning Activities

    Get PDF

    Production Functions with Factor Oriented Scale Sensitivity

    Get PDF

    Heterogeneity of Family and Hired Labor in Agriculture: A Test Using Farm-level Data from India and Malaysia

    Get PDF

    The Heterogeneity of Family and Hired Labor in Agricultural Production: A Test Using District- Level Data fromIndia

    Get PDF
    corecore