Identification and Estimation of Discrete Choice Demand Models When Observed and Unobserved Characteristics are Correlated

46 Pages Posted: 19 Dec 2022 Last revised: 5 Feb 2025

See all articles by Mark Ponder

Mark Ponder

NERA Economic Consulting

Amil Petrin

University of Minnesota

Boyoung Seo

Indiana University - Kelley School of Business - Department of Business Economics & Public Policy

Date Written: December 2022

Abstract

The standard Berry, Levinsohn, and Pakes (1995) (BLP) approach to estimation of demand and supply parameters assumes that the product characteristic observed by consumers and producers but not the researcher is conditionally mean independent of observed characteristics. We extend BLP to allow all product characteristics to be endogenous, so the unobserved characteristic can be correlated with the observed characteristics. We derive moment conditions based on the assumption that firms choose product characteristics to maximize expected profits given their beliefs at that time about market conditions and that the “mistake” in the amount of the characteristic that is revealed once all products are on the market is conditionally mean independent of the firm’s information set. Using the original BLP dataset we find that observed and unobserved product characteristics are highly positively correlated, biasing demand elasticities upward, as average estimated price elasticities double in absolute value and average markups fall by 50%.

Suggested Citation

Ponder, Mark and Petrin, Amil and Seo, Boyoung, Identification and Estimation of Discrete Choice Demand Models When Observed and Unobserved Characteristics are Correlated (December 2022). NBER Working Paper No. w30778, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4306733

Mark Ponder (Contact Author)

NERA Economic Consulting ( email )

50 Main Street, 14th Floor
White Plains, NY 10606
United States

Amil Petrin

University of Minnesota ( email )

10 University Avenue
Duluth, MN 55810
United States

Boyoung Seo

Indiana University - Kelley School of Business - Department of Business Economics & Public Policy ( email )

Bloomington, IN 47405
United States
812-855-3667 (Phone)

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