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Identification and Estimation in Discrete Choice Demand Models when Endogenous Variables Interact with the Error

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Identification and Estimation in Discrete Choice Demand Models when Endogenous Variables Interact with the Error

We develop an estimator for the parameters of a utility function that has interactions between the unobserved demand error and observed factors including price. We show that the Berry (1994)/Berry, Levinsohn, and Pakes (1995) inversion and contraction can still be used to recover the mean utility term that now contains both the demand error and the interactions with the error. However, the instrumental variable (IV) solution is no longer consistent because the price interaction term is correlated with the instrumented price. We show that the standard conditional moment restrictions (CMRs) do not generally suffice for identification. We supplement the standard CMRs with “generalized” control functions and we show together they are sufficient for identification of all of the demand parameters. Our estimator extends (Berry, Linton, and Pakes, 2004) to the case where there are estimated regressors. We run several monte carlos that show our approach works when the standard IV approaches fail because of non-separability. We also test and reject additive separability in the original Berry, Levinsohn, and Pakes (1995) automobile data, and we show that demand becomes significantly more elastic when the correction is applied.

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University of Minnesota
Econometrics, Empirical Industrial Organization

24 March 2014 (Monday)

4pm - 5.30pm

Meeting Room 5.1, Level 5
School of Economics 
Singapore Management University
90 Stamford Road
Singapore 178903