A microeconometric model analysis of US consumer demand for alcoholic beverages
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Applied Economics
- Vol. 27 (1) , 59-69
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00036849500000008
Abstract
This paper discusses the specification and estimation of a two-stage budgeting consumer demand for alcoholic beverages using 1987–88 USDA individual and household food-consumption survey data. The upper level first-stage budgeting decision is modelled via a gamma-tobit model. The lower level second-stage budgeting allocates alcohol expenditure via a synthetic-demand system for beer, spirits and wine. The synthetic system is constructed via a normalized linear combination of the level Rotterdam, CBS and an AIDS equivalent model. Data on individual three-day alcohol consumption from the individual food-intake survey are used for analysis, while price and household-characteristics information are obtained from the house-hold food-intake survey. The results show that some individual- and household-characteristic variables, as well as economic variables, have significant impacts on consumer demand for alcoholic beverages.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Synthetic Demand System: An Application to U.S. Consumer Demand for Rice and Selected Rice SubstitutesApplied Economic Perspectives and Policy, 1994
- Short-Run and Long-Run Elasticities for Canadian Consumption of Alcoholic Beverages: an Error-Correction Mechanism/Cointegration ApproachThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1992
- Spending on Alcohol: Evidence from the Family Expenditure Survey 1970-1983The Economic Journal, 1990
- Demand Systems Estimation With Microdata: A Censored Regression ApproachJournal of Business & Economic Statistics, 1990
- The Demand for Alcoholic Beverages: Economic and Demographic EffectsSouthern Economic Journal, 1989
- Bivariate alternatives to the Tobit modelJournal of Econometrics, 1987
- Differential consumer demand systemsEuropean Economic Review, 1985
- World Product and Income: A Review ArticleJournal of Political Economy, 1983
- The Effect of Liquor Taxes on Heavy DrinkingThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1982
- Statistical Laws of Family ExpenditureJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1943