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Recent Developments in Applied Demand Analysis: Alcohol, Advertising and Global Consumption PDF

417 Pages·1995·11.455 MB·English
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Recent Developments in Applied Demand Analysis Alcohol, Advertising and Global Consumption Springer Berlin Heidelberg New York Barcelona Budapest Hong Kong London Milan Paris Tokyo E. A. Selvanathan Kenneth W. Clements Recent Developtnents in Applied Dellland Analysis Alcohol, Advertising and Global Consumption With 25 Figures , Springer E. A. Selvanathan School of International Business Relations Griffith University Nathan Queensland 4111 Australia Kenneth W. Clements Economic Research Centre Department of Economics University of Western Australia Nedlands WA 6009 Australia Library of Congress Cataloglng-In-Publlcatlon Data Selvanathan. E. Antony, 1954- Recent developments In applIed demand analysIs: alcohol, advertisIng and global consumptIon / E. Antony Selvanathan, Kenneth W. Clements. p. CII. Includes bibliographIcal references and Index. ISBN-13:978-3-642-85207-7(Sprlnger-Verlag Berlin HeIdelberg New York acId-free paper) 1. Alcoholic beverage Industry--Econo;etrlc models. 2. Advertlslng--Alcohollc beverages--Econolletrlc models. 3. Consullptlon (Economlcs)--Econometrlc lIodels. 4. Demand functIons (EconomIc theory) I. Cle.ents, Kenneth W.o 1950- II. TItle. HD9350.5.S45 1995 380.1·456631--dc20 95-30838 CIP ISBN-13: 978-3-642-85207-7 e-ISBN-13: 978-3-642-85205-3 DOl: 10.1007/978-3-642-85205-3 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved. whether the whole or part of the material is concerned. specifically the rights of translation. reprinting. reuse of illustrations. recitation. broadcasting. reproduction on microfilm or in any other way. and storage in data banks. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the German Copyright Law of September 9. 1965. in its current version. and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer-Verlag. Violations are liable for prosecution under the German Copyright Law. o Springer-Verlag Berlin· Heidelberg 1995 SoftcOYe1' reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 1995 The use of general descriptive names. registered names. trademarks. etc. in this pub lication does not imply. even in the absence of a specific statement. that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. SPIN 10134109 43/1101 -5 4 3 1 1 0 - Printed on acid-free paper Preface The study of consumer demand is important for a number of reasons. First, as total consumption absorbs more than 70 percent of GDP in most countries, it is the largest of the macroeconomic aggregates, thus having great significance for the state of the economy as a whole and business conditions. Second, the pattern of consumption contains a wealth of useful information regarding economic welfare and living standards. Closely allied to this is that as consumption (both current and future) is the ultimate objective of all economic activity and economic systems (mercantilists notwithstanding), in a fundamental sense consumption patterns are an objective way of measuring and assessing economic performance. Finally, an understanding of the price-responsiveness of consumption is of crucial importance for a host of microeconomic policy issues including public-utility pricing, the measurement of distortions, optimal taxation and the treatment of externalities. The analysis of consumer demand is one of the major successes of economics as it represents the near perfect marriage of theory and econometrics, a situation almost unparalleled in any other field of economics. This field has attracted a lot of attention since the introduction of the linear expenditure system and its application to British data by Stone (1954), followed by the differential demand system of Barten (1964) and Theil (1965, 1975176, 1980) and developments thereafter. This book presents a number of recent developments in demand analysis. These include new simple data-analytic techniques for analysing consumption data; new tests based on computer simulations for hypothesis VI testing; new methodological results on how to estimate demand equations; innovative applications to alcohol demand; extensions of the system-wide framework to analyse the effects of advertising on consumption; novel approaches to forecasting consumption patterns; and new theoretical results on aggregation of demand systems over consumers. All these innovations are extensively illustrated with the use of data from 18 OECD countries. The empirical results presented in the book have a number of uses. Application of the above new developments give rise to reliable estimates of income and price elasticities of demand for 10 commodity groups in 18 countries, as well as for the alcoholic beverages beer, wine and spirits in the UK and Australia. A feature of these results is that a number of major empirical regUlarities are identified that seem to hold across different periods and different countries. Some of these empirical regularities include (i) a strong relationship between the income elasticity of food and income; (ii) the similarity of tastes internationally; (iii) beer is always a necessity and spirits a luxury; and (iv) those commodities which are more price elastic also tend to be more luxurious and vice versa. Given that these results seem to hold in a wide variety of circumstances, we can have more than the usual degree of confidence in them. It is not too much of an exaggeration to claim that our research has uncovered a group of "natural constants" regarding consumption patterns. In many countries, it is argued that advertising of alcohol increases total consumption of alcoholic beverages. From the social and health points of view there is thus strong opposition to alcohol advertising. On the other hand, the alcohol industry argues that advertising affects only the choice of brand or beverage, and not total consumption. Accordingly, the industry tends to argue that advertising promotes healthy competition. The results presented in the book regarding the effects of advertising on alcohol consumption have immediate relevance to this important debate. A Preview This book emphasizes the unity between theory and applications. Thus we often employ the approach of presenting new analytic developments and then immediately showing their relevance through applications. While each chapter is well integrated with the others, they are also written in a way so as to be largely self-contained. Chapter I lays out the analytical framework for consumer demand. It gives a self-contained exposition of known results and some more recent developments in the theory of consumer demand. This chapter covers demand systems based on specific utility functions (e.g., the linear expenditure system), demand systems based on indirect utility functions (e.g., the translog), those based on cost functions (e.g., the almost ideal demand system) and some others. It then introduces the differential approach to consumption theory, some members of the class of differential demand equations and some new simpler alternatives. This chapter also discusses separable utility functions and demand equations for groups of goods and for goods within a group. Chapter 2 reviews, distills and systematises some of the major empirical findings on consumption patterns, concentrating in particular on the more recent evidence. This chapter analyses the consumption patterns in OECD countries by presenting a number of Divisia index measures. The chapter then evaluates recent evidence regarding the hypotheses of homogeneity, symmetry and preference independence. It also discusses the issue of constancy of tastes and aspects of functional form of demand equations. Chapter 3 introduces several new simple data-analytic techniques for analysing consumption data. These techniques are useful to apply before estimating demand equations to obtain a general 'feel' for the data. They provide summary. measures of the data and, under certain assumptions, yield preliminary estimates of key demand parameters. The techniques are illustrated with data pertaining to the demand for beer, wine and spirits in the UK. viii Chapter 4 shows how recent advances in the methodology of econometric simulation can be used to test homogeneity, symmetry and preference independence. Full technical details of these techniques are presented and, using a database for 18 DECO countries, this chapter probably presents one of the most extensive and intensive applications in the area of demand analysis. The results show that, in general, consumers satisfy the hypotheses of demand homogeneity, Slutsky symmetry and preference independence. This evidence overturns a large body of previous findings, much of which was based on flawed econometric methodology. This chapter also presents reliable income and price elasticities for 10 commodity groups in the 18 countries. Demand analysis can be very demanding in terms of data, especially when the number of goods is large. Thus for moderate to large demand systems, samples are not infrequently undersized or nearly so. Chapter 5 investigates alternative ways of estimating demand systems with undersized samples. Using another cross-country database, the chapter analyses the performance of various specifications of the error covariance matrix as solutions to the undersized sample problem. Chapter 6 presents an extensive analysis of recent consumption patterns of beer, wine and spirits for Australia. This chapter utilizes the data-analytic techniques presented in Chapter 3, the demand equations presented in Chapter 1 and the new econometric techniques introduced in Chapter 4. The analysis shows that beer and wine are necessities and spirits is a strong luxury; and beer and spirits are specific complements. The chapter also presents a comparative analysis of Australian alcohol consumption patterns with those in a number of other countries and investigates to what extent tastes (with respect to alcohol) are similar internationally. Chapters 7 and 8 give a theoretical and empirical analysis of the effects of advertising on consumption. Chapter 7 obtains demand equations from the theory of the utility-maximising consumer which include advertising variables. This chapter also analyses the intriguing link between the effects of advertising on consumption and the conventional substitution ix effects. One result is that the products which are more price elastic (due to the availability of good substitutes) will be more sensitive to advertising, something that will be interesting to marketing analysts. Chapter 8 examines the controversial issue of the influence of advertising on alcohol consumption. This chapter initially extends some of the data-analytic techniques introduced in Chapter 3 to present a preliminary analysis of UK data on advertising and alcohol. This chapter also presents advertising elasticities for beer, wine and spirits and tests the effects of advertising on the consumption of the three beverages individually and alcohol as a whole. Surprisingly, the results indicate that advertising does not increase total consumption -- it just reshuffles it among beer, wine and spirits. Thus, on the basis of this evidence, there is no support for the often-heard claim that alcohol advertising should be prohibited as it increases drinking. Chapter 9 shows how the demand equations derived in Chapter 1 can be used for the purposes of forecasting market shares and consumption. This chapter also uses Efron's (1979) distribution-free bootstrap techniques to evaluate the quality of the forecasts. The results are illustrated with an application to UK data pertaining to beer, wine and spirits. The Differential demand systems derived in Chapter 1 are micro in nature as they are based on the utility-maximising behaviour of a single consumer. Usually, since the data are available only in some aggregate form (e.g., per capita), it is common practice to use the aggregate form in the micro demand system for estimation. Critics argue that the theoretical properties of the micro system do not carry over to the macro system. Chapter 10, using the convergence approach to aggregation (Barnett, 1979a,1979b,1981; E.A. Selvanathan, 1991; and Theil, 1971,1975176), establishes the strong result that will silence the critics: The macro demand equations of the differential approach are completely analogous to the micro equations and all their theoretical properties carry over. Due to its elegance and power, we believe that this approach to aggregation will receive more attention in the future. x The Uses of the Book This book communicates in a unified fashion new results combining (i) methodological advances in economic theory and econometrics; and (ii) their empirical applications. Consequently, the book will be of interest to economists who require reliable estimates of income and price elasticities of demand for (a) broad commodity groups such as food, beverages, clothing, housing, durables, medical care, transport, recreation, education and miscellaneous goods in 18 OECD countries; and (b) three alcoholic beverages, beer, wine and spirits in Australia and the UK. Analysts (including marketing researchers) will be interested in our new approaches to measuring the effects of advertising on consumption and to forecasting market shares. The recently-developed econometric techniques presented in the book and their applications using large databases will be a major attraction to econometricians. The material on simpler demand systems, advertising and aggregation over consumers will be most interesting to theorists as the results are new and sometimes intriguing. The book can also be used for teaching purposes in microeconomics, econometrics and marketing courses at the graduate and advanced undergraduate levels. References Barnett, W.A (1979a). 'Theoretical Foundations for the Rotterdam Model,' Review of Economic Studies 46: 109-30. Barnett, W.A (1979b). 'The Joint Allocation of Leisure and Goods Expenditure,' Econometrica 47: 539-63. Barnett, W.A (1981). Consumer Demand and lAbour Supply. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Company. Barten, AP. (1964). 'Consumer Demand Functions Under Conditions of Almost Additive Preferences,' Econometrica 32: 1-38.

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