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Price: EUR 125.00The Journal of Economic and Social Measurement (JESM) is a quarterly journal that is concerned with the investigation of all aspects of production, distribution and use of economic and other societal statistical data, and with the use of computers in that context. JESM publishes articles that consider the statistical methodology of economic and social science measurements. It is concerned with the methods and problems of data distribution, including the design and implementation of data base systems and, more generally, computer software and hardware for distributing and accessing statistical data files. Its focus on computer software also includes the valuation of algorithms and their implementation, assessing the degree to which particular algorithms may yield more or less accurate computed results. It addresses the technical and even legal problems of the collection and use of data, legislation and administrative actions affecting government produced or distributed data files, and similar topics.
The journal serves as a forum for the exchange of information and views between data producers and users. In addition, it considers the various uses to which statistical data may be put, particularly to the degree that these uses illustrate or affect the properties of the data. The data considered in JESM are usually economic or social, as mentioned, but this is not a requirement; the editorial policies of JESM do not place a priori restrictions upon the data that might be considered within individual articles. Furthermore, there are no limitations concerning the source of the data.
Authors: Guzmán, Giselle
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: I present evidence of systematically heterogeneous expectations, a violation of the Rational Expectations Hypothesis. I demonstrate that the expectations of different gender and wealth cohorts have different relative abilities to predict inflation, interest rates, unemployment, income, stock prices, and the …housing market. There is evidence of differences in learning and cognition. Using a cross-sectional analysis, I demonstrate that the influence of gender on housing market expectations is robust in controlling for other demographic factors, such as income, education, race, age, and marital status. Over the full thirty-year sample period, as well as during the 2002–2006 housing bubble period, men were significantly more optimistic than women in their home price expectations with lower dispersion of expectations. The results cast doubt on the Rational Expectations Hypothesis and complement recent findings in the emerging field of Neuroeconomics. Show more
Keywords: Rational Expectations Hypothesis, heterogeneous expectations, gender, wealth, inflation, interest rates, unemployment, income, stock prices, housing market, income, education, race, age, and marital status, demographic factors, Gallup, Conference Board, Michigan, surveys, housing bubble, learning, cognition, expectations, sentiment, risk aversion, herding, contagion, speculative behavior, overconfidence, risk taking, economic forecasting, asset prices, bubbles, economic policy, Bayesian forecasts, testosterone, Neuroeconomics
DOI: 10.3233/JEM-2012-0357
Citation: Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, vol. 37, no. 1-2, pp. 1-60, 2012
Authors: Pierce, Justin R. | Schott, Peter K.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: While the relationship between international trade and domestic economic activity is an important topic in economics, research in this area has been slowed due to data limitations. In this paper we provide tools that improve the existing data in two …ways. First, we develop an algorithm that yields concordances between the ten-digit Harmonized System (HS) codes used to classify products in U.S. international trade and the SIC and NAICS industry codes used to classify domestic economic activity. These concordances then yield novel time series of industry-level international trade data for the years 1989 to 2009. Second, we provide concordances between HS codes and the SIC and NAICS product classes used to classify U.S. manufacturing production, allowing for matching at a more disaggregated level than was previously available. Show more
Keywords: International trade, industry classification
DOI: 10.3233/JEM-2012-0351
Citation: Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, vol. 37, no. 1-2, pp. 61-96, 2012
Authors: Dimand, Robert W. | Ben-El-Mechaiekh, Hichem
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: General equilibrium was independently developed in Irving Fisher's 1891 Yale PhD dissertation in economics and mathematics, Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices (published the next year), which was the basis for his pioneering course "The Mathematical Theory …of Prices" in Yale's Mathematics Department in the 1890s. As part of his dissertation, Fisher constructed a hydraulic mechanism to simulate the computation of general equilibrium prices and quantities. Paul Samuelson modestly declared Fisher's thesis the greatest dissertation in economics, but Robert Dorfman suggested that Fisher was fortunate his thesis was not rejected for inadequate knowledge of the literature, since, knowing only Jevons and Auspitz and Lieben, Fisher discovered the writings of Walras and Edgeworth just a few weeks before submitting his final draft. Beyond independently rediscovering general equilibrium, Fisher took an ordinalist approach to preferences and utility, stating that the "foisting of Psychology on Economics [by Gossen, Jevons, and Edgeworth] seems to me inappropriate and vicious" and presenting total utility surfaces that would be termed indifference curves. Most of all, Fisher differed from his contemporaries in his emphasis on general equilibrium analysis that, at least in principle, would be computable and applicable. As William Brainard and Herbert Scarf [14] emphasize, the Fisher machine, the ingenious hydraulic mechanism constructed by Fisher to illustrate his dissertation by solving for equilibrium prices and quantities in a model economy, is a landmark both in the history of economic modeling and the history of pre-electronic computing. This paper examines the theory of general economic equilibrium presented in Fisher's dissertation, of which the celebrated Fisher machine was a greatly simplified attempt at implementation. Fisher's version of the theory is compared with the work of Walras, Edgeworth, and Pareto, with particular attention to Fisher's emphasis on ordinalism and computability. The paper also investigates the reception of Fisher [27] by Pareto and reviewers such as Edgeworth, Fiske, Kinley, and Phillips (collected in Dimand, ed., Irving Fisher: Critical Responses [21]), and its later influence and lack thereof. With regard to later influence, the paper investigates the extent of acquaintance with Fisher [27] in two institutions he helped create, the Econometric Society and the Cowles Commission for Research in Economics (and its successor the Cowles Foundation at Yale), as well as the problematic relationship of Fisher's early general equilibrium analysis to his later work in capital theory and monetary economics. Show more
Keywords: Irving Fisher, early computable general equilibrium, history of computing in economics
DOI: 10.3233/JEM-2012-0354
Citation: Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, vol. 37, no. 1-2, pp. 97-118, 2012
Authors: Thomas, Adam
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: This study is motivated by an intriguing puzzle found in the literature on family formation: quantitative analyses tend to show that marriage is usually financially beneficial for low-income single mothers and their children, but, in the relevant qualitative literature, such …women often identify men's limited financial resources as a key reason for their remaining unmarried. I seek to reconcile these findings by examining the functional form of the relationship between men's earnings and their marital prospects. I find that this relationship is best described by models in which earnings are expressed as a percentile ranking relative to the earnings of one's peers. This finding persists across numerous alternative specifications and is robust to the use of an alternative method for calculating earnings. I conclude that many low-skilled men may, as a condition of becoming marriageable, be required to demonstrate that they are at least as capable as their peers of improving their partners' financial well-being. Show more
Keywords: Family formation, marriageability, functional form
DOI: 10.3233/JEM-2012-0353
Citation: Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, vol. 37, no. 1-2, pp. 119-144, 2012
Authors: Dupont-Kieffer, Ariane
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: The specific Scandinavian contribution to national accounting relates to the links knitted by Ragnar Frisch and Erik Lindahl between macroeconomics and national accounts in the 1930's. They share a common epistemological aim and a common theoretical inheritance. Firstly they were …both driven by the ambition to get concepts and analytical framework for understanding business cycles and for designing economic policies. This conceptual work is strongly embodied to empirical investigations, national accounts being viewed as the experimental basis for macroeconomics and the base for policy and planning purposes. Secondly we will show that their common methodological ambition was rooted in sharing of the legacy of Wicksell's theoretical proposals. This could explain why Frisch and Lindahl both distinguish real items from financial items, real from financial accounts, real from financial economic circulation in order to stress the impact of money on real economic phenomena. They also attempted to carry on in their respective national accounts an ex ante/ex post analysis in order to underline the role of the agents' anticipations in the economic processes and cycles. Show more
Keywords: Macroeconomics, national accounts, economic policies
DOI: 10.3233/JEM-2012-0352
Citation: Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, vol. 37, no. 1-2, pp. 145-174, 2012
Article Type: Correction
Abstract: Correction to JESM 36-4 2011 pages 289–320 (Caroline Danielson et al. / Asset and reporting policies in the supplemental nutrition assistance program)
DOI: 10.3233/JEM-2012-0355
Citation: Journal of Economic and Social Measurement, vol. 37, no. 1-2, pp. 175-176, 2012
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