Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5096613 Journal of Econometrics 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
The concept of parameter identification (for a given specification) is differentiated from global identification (which specification is right). First-order conditions for production under risk are shown to admit many alternative specification pairs representing risk preferences and either perceived price risk, production risk, or the deterministic production structure. Imposing an arbitrary specification on any of the latter three determines which risk preference specification fits a given dataset, undermining global identification even when parameter identification is suggested by typical statistics. This lack of identification is not relaxed by increasing the number of observations. Critical implications for estimation of mean-variance specifications are derived.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Statistics and Probability
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